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  1. 7 feb 2020 · February 7, 2020. Courtesy Mark Rappaport. “Rock Hudson’s Home Movies,” one of the most original of all essay-films, screens Feb. 13 and Feb. 16, at Anthology Film Archives, in a ...

  2. 8 dic 2023 · Directed by Douglas Sirk, the film's lush visuals and poignant performance by Hudson make it a must-watch classic. More All That Heaven Allows. #37 of 74 on The Best Movies About Forbidden Love. #68 of 82 on The 50+ Best Movies About Unrequited Love, Ranked. #17 of 55 on The 55 Best Movies of 1955.

  3. Part of what emerges, to hilarious effect, is the extraordinary amount of male cruising and number of barbed allusions to Hudson’s gayness that his movies of the 50s and 60s contain; what also emerges is the sexual ideology of the period. Though much of this essential work is extremely funny, it is also very much about death in relation to ...

  4. Rock Hudson's Home Movies. États-Unis / 1992 / 1:03:22 / VOSTF. Avec Eric Farr. En 1985, l'acteur Rock Hudson est la première personnalité hollywoodienne à décéder du sida. Le public découvre à cette occasion l'homosexualité d'une star qui fut contrainte tout au long de sa carrière d'incarner un archétype de virilité conforme à son ...

  5. Rock Hudson’s Home Movies (1992) is a provocatively entertaining and hugely influential film essay from Mark Rappaport (From the Journals of Jean Seberg). It uses a collage of film clips from throughout Hudson’s career, and a winking performance by Eric Farr as a Hudson stand-in, to highlight the homosexual subtext in his work.

  6. The film quirkily pastiches scenes with laughable innuendos, most notably with his recurring pal Tony Randall. Much like Doris Day, there's little sexuality between Hudson and Randall, but lots of old bickering married couple banter. It seems impossible to take seriously in the beginning, very tongue in cheek,…. Available here for viewing.

  7. 3 dic 2023 · Using a mix of narration -- from the point-of-view of an imagined, posthumous memoir read by Hudson himself -- and classic film footage of the actor, Rappaport attempts to deconstruct the mystique surrounding Hudson's very private off-screen life and dalliances.