Judy Tenuta, Paul Denniston, Jason Terisi, Jordan
Roberts, Bill Ingraham. (Not Rated, 103 min.)
And here I thought everybody had forgotten about comedian Judy Tenuta. Boy, was I
wrong. This alternately hilarious and annoying take on sexual stereotypes gives the
brash, unrelentingly loud Tenuta ("Pigs!") top billing (the press kit even goes so
far as to label her "The Star"), although the film actually belongs to male lead
Paul Denniston, a wonderfully nuanced comic actor from the Chicago area. In portraying
the character of Matt Grabowski, Denniston uses the audience's preconceived notions
about sexual politics to his advantage, both humorously and otherwise. Butch Camp
follows the somewhat meek Grabowski as he struggles to assert himself in a world
of crass, boisterous breeders. Grabowski is hooked on the notion of true love yet
disdainful of the one night stand that his friend Danny (Ingraham) tries to set him
up with. Grabowski, instead, gravitates toward more sensitive prospects, only to
find, time and again, his tender romantic hopes dashed and bed mockingly devoid of
true companionship. It's a tale anyone can relate to, queer, straight, or otherwise,
but de Gaetano pulls a comic U-turn when he has the beleaguered Grabowski enlist
in Butch Camp, a sort of neo-fascist assertiveness-training seminar by way of boot
camp overseen by the dominatrix Samantha Rottweiler (Tenuta). As mentioned above,
Tenuta's role is secondary: she performs offshoots of her stage act and berates her
whimpering charges to go out there and kick some breeder butt ("Bash or be bashed!").
As a message of gay empowerment, this may not be the right tack to take in the real
world, but then Butch Camp bears little resemblance to the world as we know it; it's
an extreme comic fantasy riff on a genuinely emotional subject, but above all, this
is comedy of the most bizarre, laugh-out-loud order. While de Gaetano's script sometimes
wanders into the realm of the puerile, Denniston and a talented supporting cast make
the most of some of the most inspired comic set-pieces I've seen in a long time.
Far surpassing mainstream gay comedies like The Birdcage and Kiss Me Guido in terms
of outright, silly fun, Butch Camp tackles a tough subject with wacky aplomb. Surprisingly
touching at times and consistently funny, de Gaetano's film is a hopelessly romantic
comedy no matter what your sexual proclivities may be.
3.0 stars
--Marc Savlov
Capsule Reviews
Butch Camp 
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