Common Ground (film)

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Common Ground
Directed by Donna Deitch
Produced by Brian Kerwin
A.D. Oppenheim
Written by Paula Vogel (segment "A Friend of Dorothy's")
Terrence McNally (segment "M. Roberts")
Harvey Fierstein (segment "Amos and Andy")
Starring Brittany Murphy
Jason Priestley
Steven Weber
Jonathan Taylor Thomas
Edward Asner
James Le Gros
Distributed by Showtime
Release date(s) 2000
Running time 105 min.
Language English
IMDb profile

Common Ground is a 2000 Showtime television movie directed by Donna Deitch and written by Paula Vogel, Terrence McNally and Harvey Fierstein. It stars Brittany Murphy, Jason Priestley, Steven Weber, Jonathan Taylor Thomas, Edward Asner and James Le Gros. The film contains three short stories about gay Americans during different time periods in the fictional town of Homer, Connecticut, and their efforts to find "common ground" or respect from the heterosexual majority. The movie received an R rating from the MPAA for violence, profanity and sexual themes. The film is often compared to If These Walls Could Talk and The Hours.

Contents

[edit] Cast

Actor Role
Edward Asner Ira
Beau Bridges Father Leon
Harvey Fierstein Don
Erik Knudsen Young Johnny Burroughs
James LeGros Amos
Brittany Murphy Dorothy Nelson
Jason Priestley Billy
Helen Shaver Janet
Eric Stoltz Johnny Burroughs
Jonathan Taylor Thomas Tobias
Steven Weber Gil Roberts

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

[edit] "A Friend of Dorothy's"

In the 1950s Dorothy Nelson (Brittany Murphy) joins the US Navy where she meets the Friends of Dorothy, a code name for a group of gay and lesbian sailors. The code comes from Judy Garland's standing as a film icon to many gay and lesbian Americans who grew up before the Stonewall Riots of 1969 and is a reference to her starring role in The Wizard of Oz.

Nelson meets Billy (Jason Priestley), who takes her to an interracial nightclub that tolerates gay people. However, the NCIS raids the nightclub, and Nelson is among those servicemembers who receive a Section 8 discharge for "sexual perversion." Returning to Homer, she tries to restart her life as a public school teacher, but her Section 8 discharge prevents her from getting a job. When her homosexuality becomes public knowledge, her mother expels her from the house, forcing her to seek shelter at a family friend's grocery store. However, the townspeople disapprove of this arrangement, and Nelson becomes homeless. An independent minded woman named Janet (Helen Shaver) at the local diner defends her against the verbal harassment and advises Nelson to go to the bohemian Greenwich Village, the only place where she might be free to be herself.

[edit] "Mr. Roberts"

The second story flashes forward to the town of Homer in the 1970s, towards the end of the Vietnam War, where a closeted gay high school French language teacher, Mr. Roberts (Steven Weber), has a student named Tobias (Jonathan Taylor Thomas) who is on the verge of coming out of the closet, and whom he suspects wishes to confide in him. Roberts must keep his homosexuality a secret for the fear of losing his job, but his live-in boyfriend pressures him to set a good example for the students by illustrating the importance of tolerance and justice. Tobias visits a prostitute on the advice of his swimming coach, with the idea that she can help him "become a man", but rather instead gives him some good advice about being himself.

After Tobias is brutally sexually assaulted by bullies, Roberts comes out to his students and lectures them on the evils of bias-motivated hatred. Tobias graduates from high school and leaves Homer to attend college in the big city.

[edit] "Amos and Andy"

The final short story takes place in the present day (2000), when a father and the townspeople have to come to terms with the fact that two men will be getting married during a commitment ceremony to be held in the town. The father is planning to lead a protest march against the wedding, while his son, Amos (James Le Gros), is nervous about getting married and going against the cultural stereotype of gay men. The film ends on a positive note, with father and son reconciling and the wedding taking place as scheduled.

[edit] References

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