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A Wild Ride From ‘Dilettante’ to Director

Theda Hammel is under no delusion that Covid is box-office gold. “I don’t think it’s going to draw people in, the idea of dwelling on that time,” she said last week at the Soho Grand Hotel in Manhattan, sipping an herbal tea on a leather couch. “But I think it has value as a little bit of a time capsule.” Later this month, her debut film, “Stress Positions,” an ensemble comedy that showed at Sundance, will ask audiences to return to the early days of the pandemic, a time that many people would rather forget.

And what about the no-straight-people-in-her-entire-movie thing? Was that some sort of canny strategy? No, just a function of circumstance. “I don’t know any straight people,” Ms. Hammel, 36, said.

“I don’t know any.” The film is largely set within the confines of a Brooklyn brownstone, where an anxious 30-something, played by the comedian John Early, tries to keep his potentially virus-carrying friends at bay as they clamor to meet his 19-year-old nephew, an injured Moroccan model he started caring for just as the world shut down. Masks dangle from chins, but the word “Covid” is uttered only once. That’s because Ms.

Hammel is less interested in life during the pandemic than the way a certain set of bourgeois millennials responded to it. The preoccupation of her movie is privilege: the way it coddles, insulates, divides. We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

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The story of ancient history’s most famous twink has inspired a new “psychosexual thriller”
Variety announced today that New Queer Cinema trailblazer Gus Van Sant (My Own Private Idaho, Milk) has come on board as a producer for upcoming “psychosexual thriller” Antinous, named after ancient Roman emperor Hadrian’s young lover.The feature directorial debut from artist & photographer Stuart Sandford, the film will be a modern-day drama about a young actor who is convinced he’s the reincarnation of Antinous, telling a story that “bridges the grandeur of ancient Rome with Hollywood’s obsession with youth, beauty and immortality.” We’re in!It’s an especially rich source for Van Sant, Sandford, and their team to draw from for a film: Sure, there are precious few details about the real-life Antinous, and his life was cut tragically—and mysteriously—short, but his legacy looms large in history.Subscribe to our newsletter for your front-row seat to all things entertainment with a sprinkle of everything else queer.Little is known about Antinous’s origin, but it’s believed he lived in Bythnia, the far eastern reaches of the Roman Empire, and was possibly as young as 11 when he first met Hadrian, who was in his 40s.Over the years, historians have offered up opposing theories about his background—that possibly he was a slave, or a prince, or possibly an illegitimate son of the emperor himself. But one thing pretty much all experts can agree on was that he possessed a striking beauty, which is certainly what caught Hadrian’s eye.Now, if you’re a regular reader of Queerty, we’re sure we don’t have to tell you that, during this time, it was not uncommon for men to sleep with other men, and especially for those in power to take up a much younger male lover.
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