Stereotypes in Film(Continued...)
SEX & VIOLENCE The gays didn't take kindly to Bill James 'Buffalo Bill' Gumb Serial killer "Buffalo Bill" Gumb in The Silence of the Lambs certainly portrayed homosexuals and transsexuals as disturbed and sexually deviant (his calling card was to skin the women he killed and wear their flayed hides—it was his way of becoming a woman), but at least it wasn't your typical limp-wristed gay stereotype. And some might argue that it helped to defy the misconception that gays are inherently weak. Still, gay rights groups boycotted the film, and GLAAD's L.A. executive director, Richard Jennings, fumed in a press release, "What makes this film's extremely negative portrayal so damaging ... is that the film industry has shown itself ... incapable of depicting positive gay or lesbian characters." Though Lambs director Jonathan Demme never outright apologized for offending GLAAD, it's generally thought that his next big film, 1993's Philadelphia, was a mea culpa to the queer community. |
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