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This sexy feel-good romp is an enjoyable, over-the-top comedy masquerading as a Southern potboiler. The setting is conservative Azalea Springs, Texas, where underneath the veneer of classy wealth, big hair and white-only country clubs lies a venerable hotbed of lesbianism and homosexuality just itching to bubble to the surface. Leading the charge is Alex (Keri Jo Chapman), a privileged young Stepford Wife (and who has an uncanny resemblance to Sandra Bulllock) who goes against her insanely Lana Turner-on-acid mom by volunteering at an AIDS hospice. There she meets and becomes romantically involved with the gorgeous Grace, an old school friend who has just left her husband. Sparks fly and Southern hospitality takes on a whole new meaning as the two gals embark on a passionate affair. And while the Sapphic passions engulf the shocked community, other gays and lesbians announce their presence, prompting the rumor that the water is turning people gay. Far from a great film, it is nonetheless quite entertaining (and a popular hit in many gay/lesbian film festivals in 1997) and one of the few recent films that cast both gay men and lesbian characters.
Studio : Wolfe Releasing
Comedy, Family Life, Gay/Lesbian, HIV/AIDS, Lesbian, Romance
Comedy, Lesbian, Romance, Wolfe Video
Amos Lassen wrote on 02/19/2011:
“It’s in the Water”
Have a Swig, Pardner
Amos Lassen
“It’s in the Water” is fun, lots of fun. Sure the premise is ridiculous but the film is a delight and makes no pretense at being any more than it is—a feel good movie.
In the small southern town of Azalea Springs, the country club set is the ruling class. Every woman must belong to the League and big hair is still the favorite of the luncheon set and only hairdressers and interior decorators are gay. When the League membership gets an announcement that they must do some work that includes contact with “those” people, the women are stunned and unsettled, to say the least. But when the real shocker comes from a drunken comment that the water is contaminated with something that turns people gay, all hell breaks loose. This is enough to destroy the homophobic town and sure enough, it starts to do so rather quickly. Brother Daniel yells about the water at his “Homo-No-Mo” meetings, the local newspaper picks up the story, rabid homophobic picketers go to work protesting and panic ensues. In the middle of all of this is Alex Stratton, a young woman whose husband keeps his distance, an overbearing mother, and is bored with tedious social chatter and those that criticize her shoes. Not listening to either the wishes of her husband or her mother, she accepts a job at the Hospice where she becomes reacquainted with her best friend from high school, Grace Miller, who has just returned to town after a nasty divorce. The two women feel a magnetism for each other and when they are caught kissing in the Hospice supply room, they both fall out of grace with the society of Azalea Springs. Mark, who works at the newspaper and is a regular at Brother Daniel’s meetings, becomes involves with Tomas, a Latino house painter, who makes the mistake of assuming that an ex-gay meeting is an AA meeting. All the while the rumors about the water persist. The two love affairs become the catalyst for the unraveling of Azalea Springs and it is not just the water that causes it to do so.
The movie makes light of how society and narrow minded people regard us in many instances especially in small southern towns. What happens here could actually happen and the issues are presented in light humor.
The two lead actresses—Keli Jo Chapman as Alex and Teresa Garrett as Grace are always right on and totally believable and their dialogue always rings true. Spencer, the male lead, is one of the guys we all know and he pulled off the stereotype beautifully.
“It’s in the Water” is camp and acted with exaggeration, maybe a little too much sometimes but it makes up for that by its offbeat and affirming ending and the sensitive treatment of the two leads. Largely a caricature to achieve the comedy that it does, there are a lot of good lines and the love scenes are handled with great sensitivity. It is a fun movie and should not be taken seriously. Its sole purpose is to entertain and all we have to do is sit back and enjoy it.
Our Rating:
1996, 100 min
Country: US
Studio : Wolfe Releasing
Cast: Keri Jo Chapman
Director: Kelli Herd
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