![]() Paul Bettany somehow rises above all this, giving a very good performance. The realism of Frank and Wally’s relationship in the early scenes gives way to Wally playing second fiddle to the film’s attempts to extract tears from you by kneecapping your emotions. There’s also an unwise comparison between Wally’s home country, where he would have been beheaded for his sexuality, and the religious zealotry of the conservative South, where one could be disowned at best, murdered at worst the film posits that the latter is somehow a better deal. Frank warns him repeatedly that his clan is far from enlightened and that it will be potentially dangerous for him to make this trip, but Wally disregards all of this. His naïveté about the potential dangers awaiting him in the South is rather insulting. The way Wally is written is also a problem. The farther we get from the central relationship, the more clichéd “Uncle Frank” becomes, and these clichés are outdated and trite. These memories cause Frank to crawl back into the bottle, lashing out at the poor, suffering lover who’s put up with this for years. That forbidden love ends in the kind of tragedy reserved for gay characters in decades in American cinema. The forced return to his hometown causes Frank to be plagued by predictable flashbacks of the first boy he fell for in his adolescence. The film is not that egregious, but it’s also not that far off from that description. The trailer for “Uncle Frank” makes it look like “ The Help,” except this movie’s straight girl is inspired and changed by the suffering of a Magical Homosexual. ![]() Wally follows him anyway, and here’s where I started to itch. He knows his family, and he knows the South. Frank begs Wally to stay home while he attends the funeral. The overused plot device turns “Uncle Frank” into a road trip, and a silly one at that. It’s unfortunate that Ball throws a monkey wrench into the proceedings by having Daddy Mac drop dead. Additionally, the relationship between Wally and Frank feels lived in and sexy. There’s entertainment value in watching these two characters navigate the new bends in their relationship. Up until this point, director Alan Ball’s script has engendered a large amount of goodwill and interest. Frank also points out that the choir director at the First Baptist Church was one of his tribe. This entire subplot exists to show how clueless she is about signals as soon as that character entered the movie, it was obvious his romantic interests were elsewhere. After dismissing the guy with an amusing response to his awful pick-up line, Frank tells Beth not to get her hopes up on bedding him. Oh, but she has! The boyfriend who convinced her to pay that unexpected visit to her uncle had an ulterior motive: He’s hot for teacher. “I’ve never met a gay person before,” says Beth. After nursing Beth through her first brutal brush with booze, Frank outs himself. He’s always wanted to meet a member of Frank’s family, but whenever they’ve visited, they’ve been met by Charlotte ( Britt Rentschler), a lesbian whose specialty is posing as the “slutty girlfriend” of her gay BFF’s. So she’s a tad confused when she crashes a party at Uncle Frank’s and Wally answers the door. ![]() Back in South Carolina, Beth never picked up on the reason Daddy Mac hates his son so much. She’s happy to be closer to the one family member who understands her. Both treat Frank like trash, hastening his escape to the Big Apple.įast-forward four years and Beth is now a student at NYU, where her uncle is a professor. It’s safe to say Frank is the coolest person in a family that includes Beth’s mean-spirited dad, Mike ( Steve Zahn) and the even meaner family patriarch, Daddy Mac ( Stephen Root). He also offers to pose as her parent should she ever need birth control. He takes an interest in her feelings and thoughts, advising her that she should be her own person. It’s 1969, and the narrator of our story, Beth ( Sophia Lillis), has found a kindred spirit in her fellow family outcast. Having escaped his small-town existence, he’s been shacking up with Wally ( Peter Macdissi), an immigrant from Saudi Arabia. Uncle Frank is gay and living in New York City.
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