‘Spoiler Alert’: Gay Love Deserves Oscar Nominations – Yahoo News
Where are the gays?
It’s something I think about, well, everywhere I go. But I’m really searching for them this awards season.
Every year, there is some sort of industry collective that decides what movies are the “awards movies.” It never makes sense. It especially doesn’t make sense this year.
I’m thinking about this, particularly, in regards to Spoiler Alert, a movie that should be experiencing a CODA-like surge in awards attention. But I’m also wondering why Joel Kim Booster, the writer of Fire Island, isn’t a part of the fancy roundtables that the trade magazines are producing. I’m wondering why Bros and Billy Eichner, who probably made the best romantic comedy in a decade (that just happened to also be gay), isn’t a part of the conversation either.
I’ve watched a lot of movies this year. None have hit me as deeply or as viscerally as Spoiler Alert. It is the film that, when anyone asks me, I recommend. So why does it feel like some sort of word-of-mouth secret? It should be at the top of everyone’s minds.
Spoiler Alert is based on the book by journalist Michael Ausiello, about his relationship with his husband, Kit, who died of cancer. It is devastating. It is moving. It is incredibly funny. But more than that, it’s one of the most relatable films I’ve seen in a long time: It chronicles what it’s like to fall in love, the difficulties that sprout in a long-term relationship, and the way that death’s dooming door changes everything. How human.
These are themes that are incredibly Oscar-friendly. Spoiler Alert seems aware of this, to the point where it even has a scene referencing Shirley MacLaine’s iconic Oscar-winning moment from Terms of Endearment. There’s an earnestness and a relatable sense of heartache and hopelessness that reverberated in that film, and it echoes in Spoiler Alert.
‘Spoiler Alert’: The Hero Dies in the Gay Love Story of the Year
It’s a cliché at this point for Hollywood to only validate gay love when it ends in a tragic death, but Spoiler Alert, by revealing that part upfront, isn’t actually about that. It’s about the romance, the dedication, and the work that goes into being in love. (Maybe if Sean Penn played the lead, we’d be talking about it more.)
While I haven’t cried harder at a movie since my recent rewatch of Stepmom, the film isn’t just about that. As directed by Michael Showalter (The Big Sick, The Eyes of Tammy Faye), it brims with both joy and graciousness for the reality of love’s highs as much as its hardship—in humor and in hurt.
What’s frustrating is that a film like Spoiler Alert often figures into the Oscars race. Take CODA, which was the emotional, feel-good winner at last year’s ceremony. Spoiler Alert resonates in a similar way, especially for a community whose love and whose family is rarely seen on screen.
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Another good, recent comparison would be The Big Sick, also directed by Showalter; it too tells the very personal story about a couple dealing with illness and was nominated for Best Original Screenplay. But before that nomination happened, The Big Sick was also in the conversation for other major awards the entire season, from Best Picture to acting nods for Ray Romano and Holly Hunter, as the parents of an adult who has a health crisis. (Sally Field and Bill Irwin from Spoiler Alert are right there!)
I don’t think I’m alone in my praise for Spoiler Alert here. In fact, the industry website Deadline reported on the film’s strong word-of-mouth praise, and the social media reaction has been rapturous. Anne Hathaway devoted an entire post to it on her Instagram, calling the movie a “wonderful, bold, funny, tear-jerker.” To me, this sounds like the makings of the crowd-pleaser, feel-good Oscar choice. (By the way, it’s now available to watch on-demand.)