How important is it for storytellers to tell meaningful stories that can make a difference?
I think it’s important to always have the audience in mind when you’re making a film. I would love to be able to make a difference with my films, but for now I’m happy if I make something that touches people emotionally. I saw an interview with Dustin Lance Black, wherein he said that before he writes a script, he thinks about how he wants to “move the needle” in society. That’s a lot of pressure! I do feel a personal responsibility to create authentic representations of our community. I didn’t set out to make an overtly political film with Those People, but I do hope that people outside the LGBTQA community see the film and realize how similar we all are. People are people.
What are your favorite NYC based movies & TV shows? And why?
I love almost anything by Woody Allen. I’m a neurotic, Jewish, New Yorker, so I connect very deeply with his sense of humor and general neurosis about everyday life. Manhattan, for me, is the ultimate New York movie. Gordon Willis’ cinematography is just perfect. I watched that movie so many times for inspiration while writing Those People, even studying its narrative structure. I also love Hannah and Her Sisters, Bullets Over Broadway, and Interiors. Breakfast at Tiffany’s is another one of my favorite NYC movies. My mom watched that while she was in labor with me (which may explain why I’m gay). I want to cry everytime I hear “Moon River.” Paris is Burning is another one of my favorites - It’s incredible how so much of our gay slang today comes from that movie. I love the texture of the film, and how it captured the energy of the time. I think about the queens in that movie a lot, and how profound they were.
On the television front, nothing beats Felicity. I have such nostalgia for pre-cellphone New York. I was in high school when that was on, and I just wanted my college experience to feel like that. The first season is also beautifully shot, back when they used 16mm film. And Keri Russell is perfect. I was also a huge Will & Grace fan. I think the character of Will Truman was the first time I felt like I saw myself reflected onscreen, even as a closeted teenager. Gay characters on TV had mostly been the flouncing other until then, and that character truly helped “move the needle,” as DLB would say. When I came out of the closet to my family in 2003, my younger brother Jake, who was 12 at the time, exclaimed, “You’re just like Will from Will & Grace!”
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THOSE PEOPLE presents a complicated gay love triangle, brimming with erotic tension, and opens a fascinating window into upper crust, young Manhattanites struggling to find themselves amidst a myriad of moral, emotional, and erotic choices.
On Manhattan's gilded Upper East Side, an impressionable young painter, Charlie (Jonathan Gordon), finds the man of his dreams in an older pianist from across the globe, Tim (Haaz Sleiman, 'The Visitor"). Unfortunately, Charlie is also consumed with desire and love for his manipulative best friend, Sebastian (Jason Ralph, "The Magicians"), who is embroiled in a Bernie Madoff-esque family financial scandal. Sebastian's coping mechanism is non-stop moneyed hedonism, and he insists Charlie join him on his self-destructive streak of sex, drinking and partying at his father's massive penthouse. In the wake of Sebastian's dangerous downward spiral, their tight-knit group of friends must confront the new realities of adulthood. Manhattan's Upper East Side provides the backdrop for a riveting tale of entitlement, privilege, loyalty, and their complicated effect on a young man's chance at love.
Beautifully shot, and capturing in fine detail a morally suspect world of elite Manhattan's young and rich, THOSE PEOPLE creates an unforgettable sense of place, mood, and time to tell an erotic story of the ethics of desperation disguised as desire. An award-winning debut feature from young, NYC raised writer/director Joey Kuhn.
Written, Directed, Produced by: Joey Kuhn
Starring: Jonathan Gordon, Jason Ralph (The Magicians), Haaz Sleiman (The Visitor), Britt Lower
Distributed by: Wolfe Video
More Info: https://www.wolfevideo.com/products/those-people/