Oscar History
Film Bitch History
Welcome

The Film Experience™ was created by Nathaniel R. All material herein is written by our team. (This site is not for profit but for an expression of love for cinema & adjacent artforms.)

Follow TFE on Substackd

Powered by Squarespace
Keep TFE Strong

We're looking for 500... no 390 SubscribersIf you read us daily, please be one.  

I ♥ The Film Experience

THANKS IN ADVANCE

What'cha Looking For?
Subscribe
« John Waters @ 75: Pink Flamingos (1972) | Main | 5 days til Oscar. Will Ann Roth win again for her 5th nomination? »
Tuesday
Apr202021

Gay Best Friend: Hedy & Graham in "Single White Female" (1992)

a series by Christopher James looking at the 'Gay Best Friend' trope   

You wanna hear a story about how me and this bitch fell out? It’s kinda long, but it’s full of suspense.Gay Best Friends aren’t often paired with gay panic. Especially in movies made more than 10 years ago, we either were taught to laugh at queer characters, cry for them or fear them. Single White Female asked us to do two of the three. The 1992 thriller didn’t just settle for giving our jilted protagonist, Allie Jones (Bridget Fonda), a supportive gay best friend (Graham, played by Peter Friedman). They also paired her with a roommate nursing a lesbian crush on Allie and refining her murderous skills (Hedra Carlson, played by Jennifer Jason Leigh).

Broad doesn’t begin to describe the movie. While it swings for the fences with its queer characterizations, a large degree of camp shines through. This makes for a pleasurable “turn-your-brain-off” wild thrill ride...

Software designer Allie has just broken up with her cheating boyfriend, Sam (Steven Weber) and is in desperate need of a roommate for her lovely, rent-controlled Upper West Side apartment. After debriefing with her upstairs neighbor and gay best friend, Graham, Allie puts an ad in the paper. A slew of crazy candidates answer the ad, prompting Allie to choose the seemingly normal and shy Hedra, aka Hedy. The two become inseparable almost instantly. Allie is still processing her feelings post-breakup and struggling with a lecherous client at work (played by character actor extraordinaire Peter Tobolowsky). Hedy’s constant companionship is more of a balm than a cause for concern.

In retrospect, Jennifer Jason Leigh getting that haircut was the first real cry for help.

Hedra Carlson: Did you know that identical twins are never really identical. There's always one who's prettier. And the one who's not does all the work. She used me, and... Then she left me. Just like you.

[Hedy holds a gun up to Allie's head while holding a handful of pills] Come on. Take them. Come on, Allie, it's nicer this way.

It’s important that Hedy’s desire for Allie isn’t fully based in delusion. Allie is clearly straight and doesn’t telegraph that she wants to be romantic with Hedy, who also doesn’t disclose that she is a lesbian (or even that she would self-identify as such). However, Allie does really like Hedy as a friend and builds her new life post-breakup around her. When you give Hedy an inch, she takes a mile. It’s not that she jumps straight to murder right away. Instead, she does more innocuous, crazy roommate things, like buying a dog without telling Allie. All of Hedy’s actions are meant to strengthen bonds that Allie started forming with her. Hedy just takes things too far.

The movie wraps Hedy’s affections for Allie up in envy. One of the most famous warning signs in the movie comes when Hedy chops off her hair to give herself a similar short hairdo as Allie. When Allie gets tipped off that Hedy may be up to something, she does some investigating into her past. Here she stumbles upon newspaper clippings about the accidental death of Hedy’s twin sister Judy from when they were both nine-years-old. There’s a reading that Hedy wants Allie to fill this vacancy in her heart that was left when Judy died. I think there’s a lot more envy wrapped up in Hedy’s desire. She covets Allie’s hairstyle, her ex-boyfriend and anyone or anything that gets her attention. Hedy also pretends to be Allie so she can give Sam a blowjob and blackmail him. Her love and desire is all consuming. Unfortunately, the only way Hedy knows to express her love is to make herself in the image of her love. She eventually makes out with Allie, making her attention known.

Seriously... how did they expect us to believe Graham was hopelessly single.

Graham Knox: Allie, either she's gone by Saturday or I go to the police, okay?

Allison Jones: [Allie smiles] That was pretty impressive.

Graham Knox: I can be butch when I have to. I get it from my mother.

While Hedy is a spectre that we learn more and more about as the film goes along, Graham never gets a similar level of depth. The movie never makes him fully sexless (he enjoys listening to Sam and Allie have sex through their vents), but never shows him in situations of actual desire. He makes quippy remarks about being single and never finding anyone, but Friedman sports model good looks. It’s a rule in 90s thrillers, everyone should look like they belong on the cover of Vogue. Friedman wants to play Graham as a charming devil, and the camera tends to linger on his shirtless body when we are in his apartment. Being seen as a bit of a sexpot or desirable object is somewhat progressive by early 90s standards. Yet, Graham never gets to be a fully formed gay character.

Horror movies have a long history of killing off a minority first. This has been the topic of so many spoofs of the genre. When Allie comes to Graham with concerns about Hedy, she basically signs his death warrant. Hedy breaks into Graham’s apartment and attacks him. This queer on queer crime supposedly ends in Graham’s death. The film’s third act twist shows that Graham wasn’t dead and allows him to get the jump on Hedy, allowing Allie to eventually triumph. This is a smart way the movie plays into what we think of horror movie tropes. The underdeveloped, somehow “othered” character usually gets picked off first. Graham more than fits the bill, while the cheating Sam is more of a climactic kill. Yet, the movie does at least give Graham some vindication.

Haven't we all been in this situation before? No?We’ve covered a few Don Roos movies so far in our series (Boys on the Side, The Opposite of Sex), so much so that he may be considered the patron saint of the Gay Best Friend. This isn't exactly a coincidence. Especially in the 90s, this trope of the “gay best friend” was used best by gay writers. They understood that this character type would be one way audiences would tolerate queer characters. We weren’t at a place where gay characters were regularly leads, unless it were an “issue movie” (ex: Longtime Companion or Philadelphia). Thus, Roos uses these familiar tropes to both normalize gay characters and poke fun at certain perceptions of queer characters. The image of the "predatory gay" has been harmful, and Hedy isn't the most nuanced portrayal of unrequited love. Yet, Roos acknowledges that the characters live in a world populated by queer people. Some may be boogey(wo)men, but others are just hot himbos trying to get by.

Is Single White Female positive queer representation? No. Is Single White Female actively queer? Yes. Is Single White Female good? Yes and no, just have some fun. Especially in the early 90s, representation wasn’t always about moving the community forward, it was about being visible in a world that didn’t want gay stories told. Between this and Basic Instinct, it isn’t great that lesbian desire is synonymous with murderous tendencies. Unlike in the latter example, we at least spend enough time with Hedra’s yearning and desire for her final, violent turn to feel emotionally earned. We’ve all experienced lusting after someone we can’t have. Luckily, we all haven’t tied them to a chair and murdered their gay best friend.

Previously in Gay Best Friend

pre stonewall

post stonewall

1990s and the 2000s

the now

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (14)

I miss Bridget Fonda in the movies.

April 20, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterWimsey

I don't consider Hedy a gay character. Her "lesbianism" is purely circumstantial. When she goes to a sex club, she's positioning herself to a man. When she's masturbating, it's because she doesn't have a partner. Like her wanting to kiss Allie isn't romantic nor sexual to me. She covets intimacy where a familial kiss on the mouth isn't an incestuous gesture.

April 20, 2021 | Unregistered Commenter/3rtful

Having seen The Awful Undoing on HBO this weekend I miss the thrillers of the 90s more than ever.

April 20, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterPeggy Sue

Oh, how I miss the thrillers of the 90s.

And the Jennifer Jason Leigh and Bridget Fonda of the 90s.

I'd forgotten all about Graham, and started reading this assuming the "gay best friend" was Hedy.

April 20, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterMike in Canada

I doubt that in 2020 a title like "Single White Female" would even be allowed!

April 20, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterRue

I miss Bridget Fonda too.

I'm a Barbet Schroeder fan and this is the best of his Hollywood thrillers of the '90s.

As a title, "Single White Female" must rank as one of the most famous of modern times!

April 20, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterEdward L.

Rue: it's 2021!

April 20, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterEdward L.

Single White Female and Shallow Grave were the reason I’ve always avoided unknown roommates in my adult life! As previously said, I miss Bridget and 90’s thrillers too. And never thought about Hedy as a lesbian. Anyway, I love this movie, the haircuts and the apartment. Thank you, Christopher, to bring it back to memory.

April 20, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterAntônio

That was an awful, awful movie - so much blood! But Rue, did you know it is 2021?

April 20, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterJesse

Mike in Canada - Me too!!

Rue - That's true!

April 20, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterSusanita

Bridget Fonda is so good, I recently rewatched 'Point of No Return', and it is definitely rewatchable, she's amazing in that.
SWF is on HBOMax now, so I'm off to rewatch that.

April 20, 2021 | Unregistered Commenterbdog

Somehow this became the go-to movie for middle school parties and sleepovers for my crew around 1993-95. Not sure why exactly.. it had a little bit of nudity, was a little scary, was a little transgressive but not overly so. That said, it’s excellent at what it does. I miss ‘90s thrillers like this (Hand That Rocks the Cradle, Blink, Sleeping with the Enemy, etc.). They just don’t make them like they used to!

PS: I never read Hedy as lesbian, just jealous and clingy.

April 20, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterParanoid Android

These are two performances that are completely aware of the movie they are in. They also go above and beyond what is asked of them. The movie works because both Leigh and Fonda demonstrate a true connection before our eyes. It is just mesmerizing to look at Jennifer Jason Leigh's 90's run. There is just no competition. I'm not talking about mainstream success, even though this was definitely a hit and has gained a cult status over the years. I'm talking about indie star vehicles that were centered in the characters she played. Even though she has excelled in supporting turns, there is nothing like watching Jennifer flesh out a character with a lot of screen time.

April 20, 2021 | Unregistered Commentergio

I watched SWF in a cinema when it opened. I enjoyed it and I share the 90’s thriller nostalgia. Fonda and Leigh are a wonderful match (and you can only say good things about Barbret Schroeder) but I never could forgive Hedra/Hedy for what happens to the incomparably cute dog pet.

April 21, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterMirko
Comments for this entry have been disabled. Additional comments may not be added to this entry at this time.