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Nope, there’s nothing homoerotic about this movie poster. Sadly, Josh’s heteroflexibility leads to his falling prey to a Dutch psychopath with a surgical fetish. When the guys have a foursome in creepy Slovakia, it’s Pax Josh can’t keep his eyes off of. In Eli Roth’s 2005 breakout slasher flick, backpacking American Josh (Derek Richardson) clearly has a crush on his buddy Paxton (Jay Hernandez). “Gay sex was more fun when straight people were uncomfortable with it,” Bobby lamented in the final moments of the trailer.Below, we hack through our 13 favorite homoerotic horror movies. (In one of the several meta voiceovers in the trailer, Eichner’s character says he hates the “Hollywood bullshit” of the camera pulling away when people are about to hook up.)Įichner promised the theater owners that gay people were good for business (joking that lesbians love Raisinets) and added the film will be a positive experience for straight audiences. The footage gives a glimpse at sweeter moments, like Eichner’s love interest Luke Macfarlane, and raunchier moments, like a four-person orgy. In the film, Eichner plays Bobby Leiber, a podcast host who get a shot at writing a romantic comedy about a gay couple, but one that “straight people will like.” The assignment forces Eichner’s character to confront his own issues around intimacy and relationships. On a more serious note, Eichner said, “It isn’t about gay people suffering tragically, it’s about how hard it is to find another tolerable human being to go through life with.” “If you like hedgehogs you’ll love gay people.”
“It’s important that before we got one movie about a gay couple we got two movies about talking hedgehogs,” he said.
He then skewered Hollywood for largely ignoring stories about same-sex couples. “Usually when I come to Vegas, I come to see gay icons perform, like Cher, Britney Spears and the Bellagio fountain,” he joked. Universal is hoping that audiences will continue to show love for romantic comedies with “Ticket to Paradise” and Billy Eichner’s romantic comedy “Bros,” which opens in theaters this summer.Įichner, who was on hand in Las Vegas, had the audience in stitches as he teed up the trailer for “Bros,” which is the first gay romantic comedy from a major studio. However, the genre has been showing signs of life after Paramount’s “The Lost City,” an amorous action-adventure starring Sandra Bullock and Channing Tatum, made a splash on the big screen this spring, grossing $100 million worldwide to date. Romantic comedies have mostly been brushed off as a dying breed, at least theatrically speaking. But after a stretch including but not limited to “Pretty Women,” “My Best Friend’s Wedding,” “Runaway Bride,” “Notting Hill,” and “Eat Pray Love,” Roberts says she struggled to fall in love with a script - that is, until “Ticket to Paradise.” As a bonus, the film offered a chance for Roberts to reunite with Clooney for the first time since 2016’s heist thriller “Money Monster.” They also collaborated on director Steven Soderbergh’s “Ocean’s Eleven” and “Oceans Twelve.” Roberts, the patron saint of romantic comedies, hasn’t returned to the genre in nearly 20 years. Ol Parker, best known for “Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again” and “The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel,” directed “Ticket to Paradise” and co-wrote the script with Daniel Pipski. The minute they land on the beach, she tells them: “You don’t have to do a whole Trojan Horse thing.” “We have to do a Trojan Horse to make her think we’re OK with this,” Clooney tells his ex-wife. They attempt to set aside their differences and call a truce in the name of scaring their daughter out of marrying a person who is essentially a stranger. “I’m including the recovery,” he fires back. “Worst 19 years of my life,” Clooney says, to which Roberts replies, “We were only married for five.” Another moment that got a chuckle from the crowd: Robert and Clooney’s characters refused to sit next to each other on the plane and hurled insults until a flight attendant lets them switch.