The Gymnast (film)

The Gymnast is a 2006 film directed by Ned Farr and starring Dreya Weber, Addie Yungmee, and David De Simone.

The Gymnast
Directed byNed Farr
Produced byNed Farr
Written byMichael Carp
StarringDreya Weber
Addie Yungmee
David De Simone
Music byCraig Richey
CinematographyMarco Fargnoli
Edited byNed Farr
Distributed byWolfe Releasing
Release date
  • January 15, 2006 (2006-01-15)
Running time
98 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Jane Hawkins (Dreya Weber) was once an Olympic gymnast whose career was ended by a devastating injury.[1] Now in her 40s, she is in a loveless and childless marriage to her husband David (David de Simone) and works as a massage therapist, while still exercising religiously to keep herself in peak condition.

After a chance meeting with a former friend from the gymnastics world, Denise (Allison Mackie), Jane takes an interest in aerial dance and begins lessons with gymnastics trainer Nicole (Mam Smith). During her lessons, Jane meets Serena (Addie Yungmee), a Korean-American dancer who grew up in a Jewish adoptive family, and is a closeted (at least with respect to her parents) lesbian. Serena, Nicole and Jane begin to work together on a Cirque du Soleil style aerial act, which Nicole hopes to present in Las Vegas. However, Nicole is forced to drop out for family reasons. As Jane and Serena continue to work together on the act, they develop an increasingly romantic relationship. Jane finds herself torn between her growing love for Serena, and the potential for a rekindled relationship with her husband who now wants a child.

Jane's husband finds out about the attraction between the two women, and Jane packs her bags and leaves. The movie ends with Jane driving to Las Vegas, where Serena is.

Cast

  • Dreya Weber as Jane
  • Addie Yungmee as Serena
  • David De Simone as David
  • Allison Mackie as Denise
  • Mam Smith as Nicole
  • Tony Horton as Chad

Critical reception

The Gymnast won both the Grand Jury Award for 'Outstanding American Narrative Feature' and the Audience Award for 'Outstanding First Narrative Feature' at the 2006 Los Angeles Outfest film festival.[2]

The Gymnast was positively reviewed. AfterEllen.com called it “a beautiful, understated film” that “stays true to itself and its characters.”[3] Variety described it as “well acted, well performed” and “surprisingly engrossing despite treading familiar ‘Lifetime Movie’-type female empowerment territory.”[4] In Out at the Movies, Steven Paul Davies said "The Gymnast has been simply one of the best, and most well-received, lesbian-interest movies of recent years."[5] Conversely, in a scholarly analysis, academic Katharina Lindner noted the film's "clichéd story line" acted as "a reinforcement of rather problematic racial and sexual binaries."[6]

gollark: We haven't conclusively ruled it out.
gollark: Sometimes, perhaps?
gollark: Yes, in our bee information reactors.
gollark: I assume they're bad ones which use chemical fuel.
gollark: Nobody cares about your boring chemical guns.

References

  1. Porter, Darwin; Danforth Prince (2007). "The Gymnast: A Vertiginous, Voluptuous & Aerial Lesbian Love Story". Blood Moon's Guide to Gay and Lesbian Film: Second Edition. Blood Moon Productions. p. 217. ISBN 0-9748118-7-4.
  2. "L.A. Outfest". IMDb. July 11, 2006. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  3. Warn, Sarah (July 11, 2006). "Review of "The Gymnast"". AfterEllen.com. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  4. Scheib, Ronnie (June 21, 2006). "Review: 'The Gymnast'". Variety. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  5. Davies, Steven Paul (2008). Out at the Movies. Kamera Books. pp. 164. ISBN 978-1-84243-291-4.
  6. Lindner, Katharina (2012). "Situated bodies, cinematic orientations: film and (queer) phenomenology". In Bâ, Saër Maty; Higbee, Will (eds.). De-Westernizing Film Studies. London, UK: Routledge. p. 157. ISBN 9780415687843. OCLC 811184179, 748335664.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.