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The Broken Hearts Club: An Interview With Greg Berlanti and Mickey Liddel

by Lindsay Marsak



The Broken Hearts Club
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  • PlanetOut's Lindsay Marsak tracked down Broken Hearts Club writer/director Greg Berlanti and producer Mickey Liddell at the 2000 Sundance Film Festival to talk about West Hollywood shallowness, the need for gay romantic movies, and what it's like making indie movies in Los Angeles.

    PlanetOut: So, there's not a lot of sex in this film. There's a real focus on romance. Do you think that fact is going to make this more of a mainstream film?

    Greg Berlanti: I ultimately think that it probably will help make the film a more mainstream film, but that really wasn't the purpose of it. The intention of it being more focused on romance was that that just spoke more about what my experience was. When I recognized the fact that I was gay, it came more from the fact that I was having romantic feelings toward men, and less sexual feelings. Does that make sense?

    Mickey Liddell: Yeah. And I would just say for me, it was the first gay script I had read that actually had all the things you would want out of real relationships. Whereas other gay movies that I've read, it was either a coming-out story or, OK, we want to see those two people come together.

    GB: Artistically speaking, it's easier to play levels of comedy when you're dealing with romance and sort of romantic intention and mis-intention. With sex, it's more farcical. If you look at the films of Blake Edwards, that's when it works, when they deal with sex and it's farcical. A lot of times, gay films, in trying to sort of be gay films, focus too much on the fact that [sex] is what differentiates them. As opposed to just saying, let's forget about all that, and what's going to be the funniest kind of scene I can write here? And for my money, it's going to come more from misperception, and from dialogue and language. Those elements tend to lend themselves more to romantic scenes than sexual scenes.

    PlanetOut: It seems like there's a real need in this film to portray gay people as being just like straight people -- same relationships, same friendships, same issues, same problems, same struggles. Was that what you were going for?

    GB: Yeah, it's what I was going for and it's what my experience was. It's why I didn't think I was gay for a long time. I was sort of looking for myself. You're looking for that piece of you that's out there in the world, and I certainly hadn't seen a movie about it. I was 23 years old when I moved to Los Angeles. I was invited to a party by a friend, and there was a group of guys that were just like I was in a lot of ways. The film was autobiographical in that way. It wasn't as much the intention to try to portray gay people as just like straight people. It was just to try to portray my experience.

    PlanetOut: Do you have a critique of the West Hollywood scene, beyond a critique of the gym culture?

    GB: I smile at it, but it's the same critique that I have of a lot of Los Angeles. A lot of Los Angeles is shallow in a lot of ways, and glossy, and focused on the wrong things. But what I try to get at in the film is that there will be moments in your life that force you to look beyond that, or look deeper than that, and if you're smart you'll follow them, and you'll rise above whatever the populous is in your city. Had I written a film about a group of gay men in New York, it would be different, but there would be just as many areas that I could critique. I just try to find what's joyful about it all, and happiness.

    PlanetOut: What does the term "independent film" mean to you?

    GB: From my experience in making it, an independent film is just a really fucking hard film to get made. And it just was nearly impossible.

    PlanetOut: Because of the subject matter?

    GB: Because of the subject matter. I mean, try and shoot 114 pages in 20 days. The budget was small -- I mean, really, really small. These actors worked for low-budget scale. I didn't get paid. I mean, that's independent film to me. You sacrifice everything, and you cram it all in, and at the end of the day you see what you got and you put it together. And it either works or it doesn't. Because of the level of talent that we had involved, I think what's so magical and great about the film is that it looks like a 10-million-dollar film, and we really had nothing.

    ML: Yeah, I've made lots of other independent films, and this was definitely one of them. I would say an independent film is when you get together a group of people, and it's really outside of the studio system. Once you're in the studio system, you're working with a large group of people. We got some money from them, but they basically said, "We don't want to know anything, just call us when you're finished." When we had trouble, and we didn't have any money, we were really on our own. You just make those sacrifices, and he [Greg] pulled it off.

    PlanetOut: Is there anything you saw in The Boys in the Band that you particularly wanted to stay away from?

    ML: Bitter old queens. Everything.

    PlanetOut: It's a similar idea with a different approach. A different ...

    ML: ... time.

    GB: A different time. Everyone gets off on saying just how angry and bitter Boys in the Band was, and I completely agree. Though it was so sort of groundbreaking in the fact that it presented gay men on screen. That identification process has changed completely.

    PlanetOut: How do you plan to market this film? How do you plan to reach all those happy mainstream gay people?

    ML: Last night [the premiere] was almost a test screening for us. I was really trying to see who it affected. My gut feeling is that there is a core gay audience, as there is to most gay films, because of the cast and the interest. I think that's a great place to start. But I really do believe that we can expand. I saw a lot of women crying and really feeling it, and saying, "These are my girlfriends." And even some straight guys. I don't think we would probably hit every straight guy, but there are some straight guys ...

    GB: ... If their girlfriends brought them ...

    ML: ... who are sensitive to this. There are a lot of similar things, and I think they really related to a lot of that.

    PlanetOut: So, word of mouth?

    ML: Yeah.


     
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