Reykjavík Grapevine - 05.06.2009, Blaðsíða 10

Reykjavík Grapevine - 05.06.2009, Blaðsíða 10
10 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 7 — 2009 Questioning Our Sexuality | "Is it really so strange?" Spiritual Leader Visits | Irina Domurath Five Guys to Turn a Straight Man Gay 1. Hugh Jackman in X-Men (2000) There is something about watching a childhood icon like Wolverine come alive, especially in this hunky frame that starts something stirring you didn’t even know was there. His pose when he has the blades on one guy’s neck and turns around to cut through the shotgun is unforgettable. So is the black leather. Pity about the yellow spandex. Hugh shows more skin in this year’s Wolverine, but this, before we knew he was a song and dance man, is his most charged moment. 2. Harrison Ford in Star Wars (1977) Sure, Luke Skywalker is the guy all adolescents identify with. He is the guy we would like to be but Han Solo is the man we would want to have. In a movie rife with sexual confusion and genital metaphor, it’s still Han’s handsome smile that steals the show. It’s not Leia who gets our lightsabers rattling, its...well, you get the point. The Greeks understood that all teenage boys secretly desire to be, uhm, Greeked by interesting older men, and the big brother figure of Han fits the bill perfectly. 3. Jake Gyllenhaal in Jarhead (2006) Jake spends most of this movie prancing around the desert in varying states of undress, most memorably wearing nothing but a Santa Claus hat on his crotch. Ho, ho and, indeed, ho. In a military society inhabited only by males, it is guys like Jake who have to provide the festive spirit, and this he does admirably. At the end-of-the- war party, his commanding officer welcomes him with the words “a little overdressed, aren’t you, soldier?” In other words, “get yer kit off, Jake.” 4. Elvis Presley in King Creole (1958) The proverbial “if I had to fuck a guy” guy. Elvis was gorgeous in Jailhouse Rock, but it is in the opening scene of this movie, singing Crawfish out on the balcony and combing that hair, that is his defining moment. Long before Bowie, the Pelvis was the first superstar to toy around with sexual identity. “Everyone who sees Elvis and does not want to be Elvis there must be something wrong with,” quoth Bruce Springsteen. We all know what he really meant. 5. Macaulay Culkin in...well, let’s just drop it here, shall we? Words Valur Gunnarsson Women, whether sitting on panels of beauty contests or destroying each others’ fashion sense around the water cooler, have always been able to appreciate feminine beauty. This, of course, gives them a distinct competitive advantage when it comes to bending us to their wills. It’s high time we turned the tables and that grown men started discussing each other’s looks in other than derogatory fashion. So here, in the interests of gender equality, are five men who would make even the most militant heterosexual question his beliefs. Valur Gunnarsson and the men he loves...  The Dalai Lama´s visit to the University of Iceland on June 2 revealed to me how different the Western and Eastern cultures are, their approaches to politics and people... The Dalai Lama was clearly confused. His translator whispered repeatedly: “University of Iceland, University of Iceland” as the Dalai Lama went up to the speaker’s desk. The Buddhist monk lost patience, waved, said: “Anyway...” and welcomed the “people” in the room. He giggled like a child. He then expressed his admiration for all the educated people in the room, referring to himself as someone who only “learned from encounters with others.” Eventually becoming aware of the fact that he was in Iceland, he started the debate: “I think that Icelanders on their island are a little bit isolated, but... basically, we are all the same human beings.” He giggled again. Disarming. He sat down. The discussion with the Dean of the Faculty for Humanities, two Professors of philosophy and one for religion, centred on religion, politics, the economic crisis and the people’s lost trust in politicians as well as the equality of men and women. Uncomfortable academics The questions and answers could have hardly been more opposing: the professors focused on complicated and broad subjects, such as war and corruption, whereas the Dalai Lama’s answers were always exemplary individual cases. It was obvious that the Western scholars were not always happy with the answers they received. Comments like: “Well, that’s all good in theory, but …” were common. The Buddhist monk continued talking in examples, creating microcosms to explain the big issues and solve the problems of the world. In the end, for him it all boils down to two parameters: morality, together with education, and self-discipline. One hour of discussion was clearly too short for the Dalai Lama, who was at his best when he indulged in long philosophical monologues only interrupted by short conversations with his translator and accompanied with laughter every once in a while. Being reminded of the time, he turned around to the dean later and asked – almost giggling again – if he was talking for too long and if this was a waste of time now. He also felt sorry for the dean, who was standing behind the speaker’s desk the whole time and invited him to sit down and be more comfortable. The dean did as he was told and the Dalai Lama gave him a friendly pat on his knee, which the dean was clearly uncomfortable with. In the end of the discussion, the Tibetan leader took his time to hand the traditional Buddhist white scarves to every participant in the discussion and thanked them individually. Everyone was smiling. The Dalai Lama was too frank, too happy to not reach everyone in the hall. I got the impression that we, the Western educated people, make everything more complicated than it actually is. In contrast, modest him sees everything clearly, just black or white. And maybe that’s what things are: black and white – which is the easiest and at the same time hardest part in this philosophy for our educated Western brains, because it makes us realise how difficult it is to go the straight and obviously moral way. A Friendly Clash Of Cultures The Dalai Lama Goes Iceland!

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