Nick Name and the Normals
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Duration: 7 days | $3.99 |
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http://www.tlavideo.com/gay-nick-name-and-the-normals/p-246660-2
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Duration: 7 days | $3.99 |
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Nick Name and the Normals tells the story an ex-Mormon missionary from Logan, Utah who transformed into notorious gay punk Rocker, Nick Name. This Rockumentary follows Nick and his testosterone fueled tour around the world with his straight band mates, "The Normals", singing songs with hardcore lyrics, and taunting unreceptive heteros and uptight homos in equal measure. Between getting kicked off stage and fighting homophobia as well as the new gay political correctness, Nick Name must start to confront the demons from his past that haunt him.
Studio : Indie-Pictures
Biographical/Autobiographical, Documentary/Documentaries, Gay Male, Gay/Lesbian, GLBT Creator / Performer / Writer, Music/Musician, Performing Arts
Amos Lassen wrote on 02/20/2011:
“Nick Name and the Normals”
Rocking Mormon
Amos Lassen
Nick Name and the Normals” is an interesting new documentary that gives us the story of an ex-Mormon missionary, Kent James, from a small Utah town who transformed himself into a gay punk rocker, Nick Name and went on to be notorious. Fueled by both music and testosterone, the film follows Nick as he tours with his straight band partners who went by the name of “The Normals”. Their songs are filled with hardcore lyrics and they tease heterosexuals who are uptight and homosexuals equally. Nick becomes a fighter against homophobia and for the new gay political correctness. But even with his sexual performances, Nick realizes that he has demons himself that he must fight.
Nick is unquestionably nasty yet very masculine. He is political and in your face and he is totally out sexually. He is foul mouthed and has an attitude that would scare most people off.
I found this “rockumentary” to be one of the most entertaining films that I have seen in a long time. He looks at truth and pushes to reveal it to others. His balance between reverence and irreverence is nothing short of amazing.
I think that what really makes this movie so interesting is the way it looks at the way Nick grew up and matured. He was raised in a strict Mormon home and grew up in the Church of Latter Day Saints. He was a missionary to Argentina as a young man and then went on to sing country music and moving to Nashville. He, one day, realized that he was tired of pretending to be what he wasn’t and shaved his head, moved to San Francisco and became Nick Name, a gay revolutionary.
The movie consists of concert footage, interviews with his band partners, Smith and Rattner, his manager and collaborators. But it is Nick who this film is about and he is constantly at the center of it. He never dodges tough questions or situations and the film follows him around for a full year. Here is an amazing look of how we never know where life will take us and how we react once we get there.
Refreshingly masculine, pig-nasty and non-politically correct
Mark wrote on 05/14/2007:
"....I haven't encountered another artist who was this refreshingly masculine, pig-nasty, political and confrontational. It's like Henry Rollins came bursting out of the closet like some phallus-driven, foul-mouthed gay Superman with a 'hella' attitude...."
Review from London
LondonMuscle wrote on 04/08/2007:
This entertaining documentary about the notorious gay punk rocker Nick Name (aka Kent James) somehow manages to balance an obvious reverence for Nick with a willingness to push and probe for more uncomfortable truth. Where it really comes to life is in its examination of James' youth. He was born in a strict Mormon family in Utah and grew up in the church, even completing his missionary service in Argentina as a young man. From here he became a rising-star country and western singer in Nashville, until one day he finally had enough of pretending to be something he wasn't. He...shaved his head, moved to San Francisco and became the outspoken gay revolutionary Nick Name. Writer-director Skora paints a remarkable portrait of this man using concert footage, interviews with his band-mates (Morris and Rattner), manager (Lucky) and former collaborators (Helmut and Ryzie). And he really goes after Nick himself with the camera, never letting him dodge tough questions or situations as he follows him for a year on tour. dir-scr Howie Skora with Kent James, Ben Morris, Rachel Rattner, Lucky, Helmut, Ryzie, Pascal, Robbie, Ralph Balzer, Tony Jardine, Stewart Who release UK 2.Apr.04 llgff/world premiere 04/US 1h15 From the British Film Institute's 18th London Lesbian & Gay Film Festival
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