Rick & Steve: The Happiest Gay Couple in All the World: Season Two Movie Review
Rick & Steve: The Happiest Gay Couple in All the World: Season Two Review
"Rick & Steve: The Happiest Gay Couple in All the World: Season Two" Overview

Rating: NR
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Q. Allan BrockaProducer : Pamela Post,Morghan Fortier
Screenwiter : Q. Allan Brocka
Starring : Will Matthews,Peter Paige,Wilson Cruz,Alan Cumming,Taylor M. Dooley,Jessica-Snow Wilson
A stop-motion animated series that magically breathes amazing amounts of life
into plastic Playskool-like figurines, Rick & Steve: The Happiest Gay Couple in
All the World sets out to embrace, reject, make fun of, and revel in every gay
stereotype you've ever heard. The fact that it can do this without offending
the gay audience or boring the straight audience makes it a good time for all.
The town of West Lahunga Beach is a sort of gay ghetto, where buff Steve (Will
Matthews) and his Filipino-American partner Rick (Peter Paige) live a
comfortable life, with the smarter Rick always trying to rein in Steve's
less-than-monogamous impulses. Their best friends are the older,
wheelchair-bound Chuck (Alan Cumming), and his Latino boy toy Evan (Wilson
Cruz). Steve's nemesis: their butch lesbian neighbor (and tow-truck driver)
Dana (Taylor M. Dooley), who has very reluctantly agreed to have a baby for her
kind-hearted partner Kirsten (Jessica-Snow Wilson). The father -- or fathers --
Rick and Steve, who made the all-important donation.
In the course of the eight-episode second season, the gang finds itself hiding
out with San Francisco's hidden Straight Underground, goes on an adventure that
echoes The Wizard of Oz, deals with a plague of lesbian gangs in the
neighborhood, and battles "Lesbian Bed Death," an affliction that dare not
speak its name.
Rick and Steve also have their parents to contend with. Rick's immigrant mother
is a sweetie, but Steve's racist mother continues to mistake the Filipina woman
for a maid, an insult that eventually leads to a bloody knock-down, drag-out
fight (Playskool figurines, remember). There's also cat (named Pussy) with
human-like intelligence, and everyone must come to terms with the fact that
Dana's baby, the cute Dixie, has inconvenient telekinetic powers.
Prolific writer Q. Allan Brocka's scripts are full of zingers that fly by so
quickly you'll find yourself stifling your laughter so you don't miss the next
joke coming along. His status in gay Hollywood also guarantees a parade of
A-list (or gay-list) guest voices such as Margaret Cho, Bruce Vilanch, Perez
Hilton, Lorna Luft, and Alec Mapa (in a dead-on take as Rick's gay Uncle Bakla).
In a milieu where things can get really nasty really quickly, Rick & Steve goes
for sweet rather than subversive. In fact, some in the gay audience might be
hoping for a bit more edge or anger. But in the end, we're talking about
cartoons, and keeping it light but sassy is the right strategy, and Brocka
succeeds admirably.
DVD Note: the DVD includes seven extra webisodes.
Man this thing was overpriced.
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Review by Don Willmott
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