MINYAN: Coming Out Gay and Jewish

 

When queer documentarian Eric Steel  adapted David Bezmozgis ‘s short story MINYAN into his first feature film the narrative became much more personal.  Like the protagonist David (Samuel H. Levine) ., Steel grew up in a New York Jewish family in the 1980’s when being gay in the midst of an AIDS pandemic was a very tough rite of passage.

Minyan starts (and finishes) with a death.  Now that his Russian Immigrant Grandmother has died, his Grandfather (a beautifully nuanced performance by Ron Rifkin) can no longer afford to live  his apartment.  Finding a cheaper one in their beloved Brighton Beach is no mean feat, but they come across a Jewish Retirement Apartment Building where there is one vacant unit which is highly sought after.

However the Synagogue is two men short of a minyan  (the quorum of ten men required for traditional Jewish public worship) so Grandfather volunteers himself and David, and is assigned the apartment.

David willingly accepts in this part of the deal as he is devoted to his grandfather who is the only stabilizing force of affection in his life.  His estranged father is a bullying ex-boxer and his frustrated mother tries to suffocate David at every turn, so he spends as much time with his Grandfather as possible.  

However the 17th year old is at  stage when he is questioning everything.  First his religion,  and so against his mother’s advice he swapped studying the Torah at a Yeshiva for reading James Baldwin at a public school.

He has to come to terms with his sexuality and was oblivious to how attractive he is to other men, like when for example a cab driver hit on him.  He wants to explore the possibility so to  get some dutch courage , he has a habit of filling a flask full of vodka at home and then topping up the part emptied bottle with water.

His first trip to a gay bar is in the afternoon when the only are people there are the local drunk sitting as bar, and a hunky barmen  (Alex Hurt) studiously reading James Baldwin.    When David loses his virginity to him his next visit he learns the book is nothing but a prop as part of his image.  And a very successful one it seems.

The neighbours in the apartment adjoining his grandfathers are two elderly widowers . David slowly comes to realize that the men living next door are more than roommates (they store their toothbrushes side by side and sleep in the same bed). When one of the couple dies and the landlord is about to evict the remaining one, it is David who surprises himself (and us) on pleading for clemency.

Much of Steel’s story is in the unspoken parts as we can see the quandary about whether one can be both gay and Jewish on David’s face even if he never really verbalises it. It’s an impressive and compelling performance from the 24 year old Levine known mainly for his stage work (an award winning role in The Inheritance).  He has the look of an old matinee idol about him which the camera really loves too.

Minyan is a gentle coming-out film with a great deal of charm… (did we mention how very hot and authentic the scenes of intimacy were too?)  We loved both the subtlety and the slow pace  and also in complete contrast athe best line from the film which left a big grin on our faces. “Thieves, adulterers, homosexuals. I take them all, Without them, we would never have our minyan.”

N.B. Minyan will be streaming online as part of https://outshinefilm.com/ Virtual Film Festival 

 


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