No references to gay culture
One of the things I found very interesting about this film was the lack of any references to gay culture. As a 47 year old gay man who came out in my late teens long before the internet, my relationship to gay culture was a very important part of my identity. By gay culture, I mean all the ways we preformed our visibility amongst ourselves and to the outside world, including bars, bathhouses, dance music, erotic art, pride parades, fashion, house and dinner parties, ect.
The only real references to the gay culture outside the relationship was Zach being cruised in the parking lot at the surfing beach and I guess Shaun's reference to Barcelona, a gay travel hotspot. Jeannie also references the gay marriage debate with her reference to their "big gay wedding". The lack of any more significant references reminded me of Brokeback Mountain, with the only reference in that film being to the hustlers in Mexico.
The lack of gay culture references made sense in Brockback but here was a little more interesting. While it could be a reflection of how that separate or different gay culture is no longer as necessary or central to being gay, the film is still about coming out in a homophobic world and dealing with internalized homophobia - and historically gay culture provided ways to deal with all that although not always in the healthyist of ways. It may be precisely because Zach's process of coming out happened within the insular world of their relationship that Zach had such a difficult reaction when he was forced to deal with the consequences of the inevitable relevation of his sexual identity to those outside that relationship - Gabe, Jeannie and Tori. Zach really had no one to turn to except Shaun and of course Shaun represented the very thing he was struggling with - opening up about his sexual identity.
I also found that it was interesting that it was straight characters that ended up supporting Zach with that struggle - Zach in the dinner and most importantly Tori at the location overlooking the ocean.
I would like to hear what other readers, especially those in their twenties thought of his aspect of the film.
Garth