Laura Dern Mike White Los Angeles film queer relationships performer man Gay UPS Laura Dern Mike White Los Angeles

Years before ‘White Lotus,’ Mike White explored repressed sexuality in dark comedy ‘Chuck & Buck’

Reading now: 365
www.queerty.com

Welcome back to our queer film retrospective, “A Gay Old Time.” In this week’s column, with Sundance 2025 winding down this weekend, let’s revisit Mike White’s dark comedy Chuck & Buck, which premiered at the festival 25 years ago.As the Sundance Film Festival wraps up its 2025 edition this weekend, we continue to look back at groundbreaking queer stories and voices that premiered there in the past.

With the highly anticipated third season of The White Lotus dropping in just a few weeks, this week we’ll discuss one of series creator Mike White’s earliest works that also happens to be celebrating its 25th anniversary.Mike White has always had an affinity for rather prickly characters and stories.

Although he’s shot to notoriety over the last few years for his work in the aforementioned White Lotus on HBO (which earned him dozens of awards for his writing and directing, and took many of his stars’ careers to the next level), he has been consistently working since the late ’90s, often exploring similar themes.White seems to be fascinated with people that portray an outside air of goodness, generosity, or sympathy, but are actually filled with a rotten ego and sense of self-righteousness that sometimes even they are unaware of.

This recurs over and over in films like The Good Girl, Year Of The Dog, Beatriz At Dinner, and the cult HBO series Enlightened, starring Laura Dern.

Read more on queerty.com
The website meaws.com is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

01.02 / 21:39
film performer Interviews show Trans audience Booking ‘Enigma’ Review: A Fascinating Portrait of Two Trailblazing Transgender Legends
Murtada Elfadl With “Enigma,” director Zachary Drucker (“The Stroll”) makes another intriguing film about trans history. From the sidewalks of New York, this time she takes the audience to glamourous Parisiannightclubs and the fringes of British aristocracy to tell the story of Amanda Lear and April Ashley. The film is a straightforward chronological documentary relying on archival footage and media interviews from that era.
DMCA