With âG.B.F.,â playing in the Spotlight section of the Tribeca Film Festival, the director Darren Stein heads back to school.
His 1999 film âJawbreakerâ used the high school setting as the backdrop for darkly comic and vicious shenanigans, with a candy-colored production design and nods to other teen movies of the â80s and â90s. âG.B.F.â also offers a heightened, glossier and more colorful version of high school, but with a lighter touch.
Michael J. Willett stars as Tanner, an unassuming teen whose life takes a twist when he is outed and becomes his schoolâs first openly gay student. He draws the attention of three popular girls, who fight to claim him as a valuable accessory, the Gay Best Friend.
Written by George Northy, the movie blends contemporary pop-culture references with the teen comedy sensibilities of John Hughes and Amy Heckerling. But unlike âSixteen Candlesâ or âClueless,â âG.B.F.â places a gay student at the center.
Along with a cast of young actors (including Paul Iacono from MTVâs âHard Times of RJ Bergerâ and Sasha Pieterse from ABC Familyâs âPretty Little Liarsâ), the film includes cameos from â90s high school movie stars like Natasha Lyonne and Rebecca Gayheart.
In an interview, Mr. Stein spoke about those casting choices and several of his ideas behind âG.B.F.â Below are edited excerpts from that conversation.
What appeals to you about high school stories?
High school is like a mini-society. Youâre sort of trapped there for four years and you develop as a person: your style, your sexuality, your interests. But youâre still a teenager. Itâs an environment where the stakes seem high, but in reality theyâre not that high because youâre still living with your parents. Itâs a good place to tell a story in a heightened way.
What was your experience like in school?
I had a pretty unhappy high school experience. I went to a private all-boys school in Los Angeles. It was very sports-oriented and academically oriented, and I wasnât particularly into either of those things. Meanwhile, Iâm going to movies like âPretty in Pinkâ and âThe Breakfast Clubâ and âValley Girlâ and âHeathers,â and seeing a world that is very exciting. I loved the music and the fashion and the romance of those worlds, and it was something that I had none of.
The film satirizes the idea of gay people being used as accessories in school. Do you see some truth to this?
Yes, it is becoming something that is sought after by some girls in high school.
Why do you think that is?
Bravo. (Laughs). Maybe it started with âSex and the Cityâ and continued with âThe Rachel Zoe Project.â Adolescent girls have access to these people in a way that they hadnât before in the past. Celebrity females have always had their gay best friends, they just hadnât done reality TV with them.
What did you find most interesting about Tanner?
He was such an appealing character because his sexuality was never an issue for him. It was an issue for everyone around him. He was fine reading comic books and having a small circle of friends and not making an issue out of his identity. He was like the kids that slide between the cracks in school and arenât put in a demographic or group. Itâs comedic to see how everyone thinks of him in a different way once he is made over into the G.B.F.
Tell me about the choice to cast â90s stars as some of the adults.
Itâs fun to cast someone like Natasha Lyonne whoâs known for movies like âAmerican Pieâ and âBut Iâm a Cheerleaderâ in âG.B.F.,â where now sheâs on the faculty. Itâs an interesting continuum. I knew that I had to give a cameo to one of the girls from âJawbreakerâ (Rebecca Gayheart). When youâre making a film of a certain genre, itâs good to understand the films that have preceded it, to see what the genre was and is and what it might be. I guess I see the teen movie through the lens of other teen movies, in a way.
The film includes progressive, pro-gay parents, like the character Megan Mullally plays.
Yes, that character is very sweet and warm, even if sheâs off her rocker. Some gay kids would kill to have a mom who would take them to pick out eye shadow from Sephora or would want to watch John Cameron Mitchellâs âShortbusâ with them. In a way, this movie is almost post-gay, where the parents donât have an issue with their kidsâ sexuality. But the kids still have some angst about it.
How do you feel the movie speaks to teenagers and their coming-out experience in high schools today?
What I love about the script is that it uses the gay closet as a metaphor for all the closets high school kids are in, any insecurity or perceived weakness that they think they have. I like the universal aspects of the movie that encourage us to see each other as individuals and not try to assign everyone to a social status.
I hear youâve been working on a musical version of âJawbreakerâ for the stage.
Yes, I got a call about six or seven years ago from a producer in New York about making âJawbreakerâ into a musical. I was introduced to a lyricist and a composer. The three of us collaborated and I wrote the book. It was so much fun to go back into that story and bring it into a new time period. I think everything that has heightened villains and tone fits naturally as a musical. We just got the rights secured from the studio and weâre excited about it.