
doi: 10.7227/fs.19.0002
The article notes a trend towards low-key naturalism in twenty-first-century independent queer cinema. Focusing on work by Andrew Haigh, Travis Mathews and Ira Sachs, it argues that this observational style is welded to a highly meta-cinematic engagement with traditions of representing non-straight people. The article coins the term ‘New Gay Sincerity’ to account for this style, relating it to Jim Collins’s and Warren Buckland’s writing on post-postmodern ‘new sincerity’. At its crux, this new style centres itself in realism to record non-metropolitan, intimate and quotidian gay lives, while acknowledging the high-style postmodernism of oppositional 1990s New Queer Cinema.
Gay, New Gay Sincerity, Realism, Postmodernism, 1902 Film, Television and Digital Media, Queer
Gay, New Gay Sincerity, Realism, Postmodernism, 1902 Film, Television and Digital Media, Queer
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