#Funny gifts for gay men movie
“I have to admit that seeing a movie about two men falling in love in New York is a movie I’ve been waiting for my whole life,” Zarrillo said.Įichner said that the creative team’s first priority was, of course, to make a “great, funny movie,” but beyond that they wanted to provide opportunities for actors that have been overlooked. Eichner credited Zarrillo - an out gay man from New Jersey, whose husband, Paul Katami, was in the audience - with being one of the challengers who followed Prop 8 all the way to the Supreme Court. Jeff Zarrillo, general manager at AMC Burbank 16, joined Eichner in debuting the trailer. He then said, “Representation matters.” There were other earnest moments, too. You don’t think a gay man can play straight but you believe in Chewbacca?” In reference to seeing gay actors playing straight, Eichner explained it like this: “Look at all the things moviegoers believe - Star Wars, Spider-Man and Transformers. He later called Bros “the hottest thing to hit Vegas” since Lady Gaga had sex with Tony Bennett on the same Caesars stage. “Usually when I come to Vegas, I come to see gay icons perform, like Cher, Britney Spears and the Bellagio fountain. “This is the most exciting thing to happen in Caesars Palace since Adele refunds,” he quipped. He kicked off his comments with a flood of jokes. Prior to the reveal, Eichner got plenty of laughs during his brief time on stage.
Bros rolled out as part of Universal’s packed presentation that featured it with a slew of trailer drops and talent appearances during the annual convention hosted by the National Association of Theatre Owners.
In another, Eichner’s bare butt is shown. “You’re both bottoms, that’s the problem,” Diaz’s character says in one scene. The clip also did not shy away from reflecting the story it tells by showing circuit parties, family moments, gym workouts, business meetings and even a four-man orgy. The trailer revealed that the film has meta moments in that Eichner’s character, Bobby Lieber, shares that he was asked by a studio to write an LGBTQ-focused screenplay as he details those conversations (some of which are shown). CinemaCon: Universal Unwraps First Look at Harvey Weinstein Movie 'She Said'