'Bohemian Rhapsody' Doesn't Straightwash, but It's Confused About Freddie Mercury's Sexuality There has been much hand-w...
There has been much hand-wringing over the portrayal of iconic bisexual Queen frontman in â.â From the filmâs inception in 2010, media critics, rock biographers, and queer writers have (justifiably) worried the film would leave out, or at least soft pedal, Mercuryâs AIDS-related death and relationships with men. An initial trailer appeared to confirm these fears, prompting gay TV writer Bryan Fuller to tweet his frustration (in all caps, of course).
, who threw himself into the role of Mercury, also threw himself into the fray when he stumbled over a question of whether Mercury was a gay icon. âWhatâs really great about him is he never, uh, wanted to or thought of himself as being boxed into anything. He just was,â he stammered. âIf heâs an icon to one, thereâs no reason that it requires another adjective, as far I see.â When asked about the movieâs purported âstraightwashing,â actress Lucy Boynton, who plays Mercuryâs former fiancée Mary Austin, suggested âpeople want to have something to criticize.â
Audiences looking to decide for themselves wonât find much clarity in âBohemian Rhapsody;â most confused of all is the film itself.
The first half focuses on the formation of Queen, and on Mercuryâs relationship with Mary Austin. They began dating when the band was just starting out, and he proposed marriage in between tours. Their love is portrayed as playful, innocent, and naive to the impending temptations of fame. Thereâs no deficit of Hollywood clichés, and the couple gets the requisite rollicking, post-coital, semi-nude scene that is hilariously interrupted by the arrival of other band members.

Rami Malek (Freddie Mercury) and Gwilym Lee (Brian May) in âBohemian Rhapsodyâ
In one short scene, Mercury leans against a phone booth, distractedly talking to Mary long distance while he stares down a beefy man heading into the bathroom. Mary sits on the other end of the line in pajamas â" the poor little lady stuck at home, the fate of their romance sealed.
The movieâs first queer moment arrives courtesy of Mercuryâs manager Paul Prenter, played by Irish actor Allen Leech, best known for his role as Tom Branson in âDownton Abbey.â While Mercury is playing the piano, Paul grabs his face and kisses him. Mercury seems surprised, but doesnât stop Paul. Itâs a familiar move in Hollywood movies, but it also presents queerness as something thrust upon Freddie, not an autonomous and healthy part of his sexuality.
The real Prenter eventually outed Mercury in a tell-all interview to British tabloid the Sun, which the movie changes to a TV interview. Needing a villain, âBohemian Rhapsodyâ views him as an ambitious con-man who urged Mercury to take a solo deal and pushes him into a world of drugs and gay sex parties. (Though this may sound like fun to some, the movie positions it as part of Mercuryâs demise).
When Mercury meets the kindly Jim Hutton (Aaron McCusker), he is the last one at his own party, all alone in his mansion surrounded by shiny things. This time, it is Mercury who grabs Jim without his consent, mistaking him for one more shiny plaything. Queer desire, in âBohemian Rhapsody,â is always malicious.
Not only does the movie frame queerness negatively, but it completely erases Mercuryâs bisexuality, preferring an either/or view. By all accounts, Mercury slept with men and women throughout his life, including with the Austrian actress Barbara Valentin, who remained a close friend until his death. In the movie, when Mercury tells Austin he likes boys, too, she says: âFreddie, youâre gay.â By erasing his bisexuality, the movie reinforces a heteronormative view of queerness, and says it through a straight mouthpiece.

âBohemian Rhapsodyâ
âQueenâs management spent decades trying to convince the world that Freddie was heterosexual while he was alive, but then conceded to his homosexuality after he had died,â Mercury biographer Lesley-Ann Jones told Them. âAll their efforts to preserve Freddie in memory as, effectively, a straight man who was in love with one woman â" his soulmate Mary â" but who was âcorruptedâ by factions of the music industry (and wasnât really gay) are ridiculous to me ⦠He was clearly bisexual.â
Produced by 20th Century Fox with the participation of remaining members of Queen Brian May and Roger Taylor, âBohemian Rhapsodyâ is an authorized biopic gone incredibly wrong. The movie doesnât understand Mercuryâs sexuality because May and Taylor donât understand it, either. They understand even less about his Parsi background, portraying Mercury as hiding his immigrant background, another disputed characterization.
âBohemian Rhapsodyâ crushes the life of a dynamic, free-thinking, explosive talent into easily digestible, hackneyed Hollywood stereotypes. It paints Freddie Mercury with broad brushstrokes in black and white, when we all know he would have used the whole rainbow.
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Source: Google News US Entertainment | Netizen 24 United States
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