Gaston gay
The live-action “Beauty and the Beast” remake is set to make history by featuring Disney’s first-ever “exclusively gay moment,” director Bill Condon revealed. We know thanks to the power of song that Beauty and the Beast’s dishy antagonist Gaston has biceps to spare and every last inch of him’s covered in hair – and now it seems we might have the sexual preference of one particular gay man to thank for it.
In the live-action retelling starring Emma Watson and Dan Stevens — Gad plays LeFou, the comical sidekick to antagonist Gaston (Luke Evans). Thanks to a subplot alteration, LeFou will be. In it, the Frozen star, 43, talks about that much-hyped, blink-and-you-miss-it “gay moment” from Beauty And The Beast. The live-action remake starred Emma Watson, Dan Stevens and Kevin.
And then, in the April issue of Attitude, director Bill Condon confirmed that Gad’s LeFou is, indeed, Disney’s first openly gay character. What’s more, his sexuality may pay homage to one of. Spoiler alert! The following contains spoilers for the remake of Beauty and the Beast. That's what many moviegoers are saying after seeing Disney's latest live-action remake, Beauty and the Beast.
The underwhelmed reaction has been to the so-called "exclusively gay moment" in the film, which has caused international controversy since director Bill Condon first mentioned it in an interview with Attitude magazine. This caused the film to get shelved in Kuwait and Malaysia , to be given a stricter rating in Russian theaters and to be boycotted by one Alabama drive-in.
The "gay moment" that Condon was referring to is a blink-and-you'll-miss-it shot in the film's final seconds. LeFou, the villain Gaston's Luke Evans side-kick, dances with a man in the final ball sequence just before the credits roll. There are oblique references to LeFou's sexuality over the course of the film. He is portrayed as having something of an unrequited crush on Gaston, having euphemistic conversations about their relationship and looking longingly at him during the song Gaston.
Outside of LeFou, there is also a sub-text filled moment during the battle sequence in which the wardrobe Audra Mc dresses three men in women's clothes. Two of them run away in fear, while one appears happier in his new garb.
is lefou gay
This moment, too, is so quick and insignificant in the greater plot of the movie that many audience members may have missed it. After the film's big opening weekend, many moviegoers described the controversy as much ado about nothing. Another said that the moment was "soooo overblown and is soooo not a problem" that "the world has gone crazy. Still, even the fleeting dance between Le Fou and another man was enough to cause spontaneous applause in some screenings of the movie, as multiple users reported on social media.
Others who supported the film applauded how much money it was able rack in despite reported "boycotts. Though the moment was well-received or underwhelming to many audience members, there were some in the LGBT community who thought the representation of a gay character did not go far enough. Also LeFou is not gay enough," one Twitter user wrote.
Facebook Twitter Email. Share your feedback to help improve our site!