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The DL Chronicles

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I stumbled across this film looking for resources to support a paper for school I wrote tackling the representation of Black Gay themes in film. I didn't know what to expect when I purchased this, but I have to say that the script and acting were equally amazing.

The downfall with this series is the writers were concerned too much on the twists and turns in the script (which I must add were well thought out) rather than focusing on the whole DL phenomenon and its effects within the Black [Gay] Community. The only episode that successfully executed this was the BOO episode, which stands out among the four as being the most thorough and raw depiction of what today's DL Black man by definition stands for. The longest of the four, the ROBERT episode, may have come close but the twist to the story makes it null and void (which I will not give away). However, there are many issues about acceptance and struggle in the ROBERT episode that the BOO episode lack, which were on point and resonate today. Everything else was unfortunately nothing more than any given episode of a soap opera in comparison.

For anyone who has watched such promising yet flawed put-together series like "The Closet" and "Noah's Arc," you will be taken aback by how believable the cast is, for starters. The script is well written but drags at times, but the acting makes up for that.

I recommend watching each episode from beginning to end to fully understand the story and catch the links between characters from episode to episode. Because the WES episode starts out really slow compared to the intensity of those that follow, I skipped to the 4th episode, MARK (which turns out to be the most comical and light-hearted of the four), before watching the other two and saying, "Wait a minute?!" and doing some rewinding for myself. But again, watch from beginning to end and pay close attention to the character overlapping for some "Ahh ha" moments.

Another shortcoming, or maybe just a question that went unanswered, was the whole purpose of the narrator and his involvement with these men. The narrator is writing a book focusing on DL men and as the episodes intro, he is either writing or talking about the whole DL culture before he starts talking about each individual. In Episode 1 WES it is revealed how they meet, but I was left wondering how, if he is telling the story, does he know all of this information about Wes. Were they intimate (which you think is obvious as the story sets up the way they meet, but it never comes into play again)? Does he know someone who knows these people? Did they tell their stories to him for his book? Is he maybe even one of the individuals involved in the stories and he has just changed the names and instances?

Maybe another season will offer these answers, but for anyone looking for an extremely entertaining, thought provoking, well-scripted and acted Black film/series of a different kind, I highly recommend this DVD.
 
I love this show, i wish it would have last a little longer every first season has it's problem, i think it would of made a nice show.
i think it realistically displays the life of both African american gay men and also Latino american gay men that live in a different culture, i like how this show was made and how they showed different type of "men", if you think about it it's not just gay men or straight men its about "men". The different life we live, and how attraction to the different gender had nothing to do with what we are.

maybe i went a little to deep, but i like this show, if it would of lasted longer i think they could of hit on many different issue in which we all could relate to.

Not so very long ago, exclusively gay TV shows were non-existent. Certainly, there were gay characters in mainstream shows, but no shows just for us. That's all changed in the last few years, and since Queer As Folk debuted in 1999 (with a superior US version appearing the following year), TV shows in which we're the majority - not the minority - have been springing up like erections in a Bel Ami flick. Noah's Arc, Dante's Cove, Metrosexuality, The Closet - and The DL Chronicles.

The DL Chronicles differs from its cousins in looking at a different set of characters in each self-contained episode, with narrator Chadwick Williams (Damian T. Raven) and the theme of "men of color" living sexually duplicitous and secret lifestyles the unifying factors. The four episodes that make up the first season are refreshingly varied, featuring men in various situations and of differing circumstance. But cast an eye over a handful of reviews of this series and you'll discover it's the third episode, Boo, which receives the most acclaim.

Undoubtably, Oneil Cespedes, playing Boo, is platinum grade eye candy, and turns in one of the strongest performances in all the episodes; it's also one of the best realised episodes. But the story - that of a downlow player and a thug - is the most obvious one; it's a crowdpleaser. Everyone wants to be a thug, and those that don't wanna get one. In particular, Boo has been trumpeted as the definitive vision of black gay masculinity, against Noah's Arc, which critics accuse of camping it up (presumably for showing some gay men acting fem). That isn't a criticism of the episode, however, just a rationale for its popularity amongst viewers.

Interestingly, Boo is shown sleeping with just about anyone - female, male, black, white, whatever. Despite being sold as a series about "men of color", the cast is actually racially ambiguous, and doesn't seem intent on perpetuating racial separtism in the gay community like Queer As Folk (which in five years didn't feature any non-white characters) and Noah's Arc (where the only whites seen on screen were gay bashers).

The other episodes are all strong in their own right, and often surprising. My only real gripe is the intrusive and dated background music - give me the intelligent, soundtrack-free experience of The Wire and The Shield. The ponderous piano employed on The DL Chronicles, so beloved of indie producers, is jarring.

Music aside, The DL Chronicles is hugely enjoyable, heartfelt, and perhaps most importantly, promises much more. Roll on season two.

 

  • Aspect Ratio ‏ : ‎ 1.77:1
  • Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
  • Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7.1 x 5.42 x 0.58 inches; 2.93 Ounces
  • Dubbed: ‏ : ‎ English
  • Subtitles: ‏ : ‎ French
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English (Dolby Digital 2.0)
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00149R4FU
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 1

 

 

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