Fireworks Logo

Latest Gay Additions...

  • Something for the Boys
  • Slag Wars: The Next Destroyer
  • RuPaul's Drag Race UK: Season 6
  • English Teacher
  • Breaking Taboos with Love
  • RuPaul's Drag Race Global All Stars
  • Fabulous Femininities
  • Before I Change My Mind
  • Boyfriend (The)
  • Baldiga – Unlocked Heart
  • RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars
  • Canada's Drag Race: Canada vs the World
  • Their Own Life
  • Last American Gay Bar (The)
  • Adam Lambert: Out, Loud and Proud
  • Interview with the Vampire
  • Crime Scene Berlin: Nightlife Killer
  • Young Royals
  • RuPaul's Drag Race UK vs the World
  • Toll
  • High & Low - John Galliano
  • Feud: Capote vs. the Swans
  • Since the Last Time We Met
  • Bill Douglas - My Best Friend
  • Rupaul's Drag Race
  • Meet Me Outside
  • Shoulder Dance
  • After Shave with Danny Beard (The)
  • Our Flag Means Death
  • Boy Culture: Generation X
  • Boys on Film 1-24
  • Glamorous
  • Golden Age of the American Male (The)
  • 100 Ways to Cross the Border
  • Willem & Frieda
  • 1946: The Mistranslation That Shifted Culture
  • Cooler Climate (A)
  • Eismayer
  • Burning Days
  • All Our Fears

Pose

Country: USA, Language: English, 50 mins

  • Director: Ryan Murphy; Gwyneth Horder-Payton
  • Writer: Ryan Murphy; Steven Canals; Brad Falchuk
  • Producer: Erica Kay; Todd Nenninger; Tanase Popa

CGiii Comment

From the off...it really has to be said...there are some very dodgy performances, notably one [or two]! A few storylines that - quite frankly - should have never made it to the final edit. As for the dancing - especially the voguing...in desperate need of better dancers and/or better choreographers! And, it's all just a little bit too clean, too hygienic...1980s New York [circa Christopher Street] was not a sanitary [nor a sane] place! Those piers were terrifying!

Those are the negatives...but, despite these 'solvable' [early days] problems, Pose has a great big generous heart at its core. And, if ever a TV series was set-up for a series of monumental heart-breaks...then, this is it!

Set in the 80s...there's no getting away from the terminal misery of HIV/AIDS as it clings and claws at every backstory and defiantly remains ever-present in everyone's future - the infected, the affected just about covered everyone in our community - those were the 80s, tears, my dears...but, [albeit temporary] respite was at hand...in the bars, in the nightclubs, in the ballrooms...the category is...Style!

Pose - rather than being an exercise in hardcore realism - is stylised...which will, in itself, excuse some of those 'solvable' problems. Style is crucial to ballroom...and, sentimentality is critical to Pose, there are great big dollops of the stuff! Don't be put off by it...in the face of adversity, sentimentality is the shining light of humanity!

Mj Rodriguez as Blanca [a new mother of a new house] keeps her house in order as well as putting her house in order...there's gonna be a flood of tears. It's a beautifully nuanced performance. You feel her.

Indya Moore as Angel [a new inductee to the new house]...possibly, the best written character...with a [commanding] performance that gives the writing due credit. The camera loves this lady. Everyone will love this lady.

Pray Tell - does a performance get any better than this? You can almost smell the awards a-coming! Billy Porter's MC, friend, confidante, designer, near-broken man...is a staggering display of light & shade...ripe, so ripe, for a torrent of tears.

Three - truly - impressive performances...setting the bar high...every performance needs to reach this level.

Think of Pose [Season 1] as a [rather splendid-with-faults] work-in-progress. Season 2 needs to concentrate on [and develop] the obvious strengths and [mercilessly] discard the weaknesses and periphery [both stories & actors].

Then...Pose will have all the ingredients to knock it out of the ballroom! Keep it stylised, keep it real, vogue-and-cry.


Trailer...

 

The(ir) Blurb...

Pose is set in the world of 1986 and 'looks at the juxtaposition of several segments of life and society in New York: the rise of the luxury Trump-era universe, the downtown social and literary scene and the ball culture world.

Cast & Characters

Indya Moore as Angel
Evan Peters as Stan
Kate Mara as Patty
Ryan Jamaal Swain as Damon
Angelica Ross as Candy
Angel Bismark Curiel as Lil Papi
Jeremy McClain as Cubby
Justin Triest as Business Executive
Andrew Henkelman as Business Executive
Samantha Grace Blumm as Amanda