Stress Positions (2024)

Stress Positions 2024

6.9/10
A darkly funny but difficult film set in the early days of the pandemic

Our take

Not a lot of people will like Stress Positions, a COVID-era film filled with characters whose ballooning egos make isolation all the more claustrophobic. Critics have used the word “unlikeable” and “obnoxious” to describe them, these mostly queer New Yorkers who populate the decrepit apartments where the film is set in, but if you have room for them, they’ll deliver some of the sharpest criticism of liberal and leftist hypocrisies in a while. The self-awareness of their jokes might get lost at times, but it’s there, and it can be enlightening if you let it in. Together, Terry (John Early) and his friends parse things like race and identity—specifically misogyny and transphobia among gay males, and the rampant exoticism of white people over dark-skinned immigrants. The latter is a subject explored poignantly and delicately through Terry’s nephew Bahlul (Qaher Harhash), a young model from Morocco who seems to be the only one smart enough to identify the follies of the people surrounding him. At its best, the film is a darkly funny exploration of even darker themes, as well as an impressively non-cringe throwback to the early days of the COVID lockdown. But it can also be quite difficult to watch, especially if you’ve had enough of New York solipsistic fare.

Synopsis

Terry Goon is keeping strict quarantine in his ex-husband’s Brooklyn brownstone while caring for his nephew — a 19-year-old model from Morocco named Bahlul — bedridden in a full leg cast after an electric scooter accident. Unfortunately for Terry, everyone in his life wants to meet the model.

Storyline

2020, New York City. The strict restrictions of the COVID lockdown means Bahlul and his Uncle Terry, who is going through an expensive divorce, are stuck in a dilapidated apartment fending for themselves. They’re visited by eccentric neighbor Coco (Rebecca F. Wright), Terry’s close friend Karla (Theda Hammel), and Karla’s wife Vanessa (Amy Zimmer).

TLDR

It’s smart and funny, but it’s certainly not for everyone.

What stands out

Bahlul’s plotline is probably the most fleshed-out and artistic out of all, and I so wish it could’ve been a standalone movie.