Why is Marilyn Monroe not the main character in the movie Niagara when she’s so clearly the best thing in it? Is the va-va-voom sound effect that’s made every time Marilyn enters a film actually diegetic? And what did Ben say that led to being [redacted] by [redacted] by suggesting that Marilyn was [redacted] by [redacted]? Well, nobody’s perfect. And who sums up these immortal lines better than the three film faguettes at the heart of this - movies imo! The once dead but now alive film podcast where gay guys convene to yap about topics of fruity miscellanea. But wait! Sound the alarms. There’s big news in the realm of Movies imo…
FORMAT SHIFT! Starting today, the format for movies imo is focusing in on just one topic per week — lovingly selected by a different member of the trio every week, with each one bringing a film or other or media object to the table beneath the chosen theme of the week. And this week, they’re setting out to answer one of life’s great questions:
The query: Is Marilyn Monroe the funniest person to ever act on screen in the history of the cinema?
The evidence: Howard Hawks’s Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Billy Wilder’s Some Like it Hot, Henry Hathaway’s Niagara, Kenneth Branagh’s The Prince and the Showgirl, and — just for fun — Michelle Williams’s My Week With Marilyn.
The faguettes: Ben, Brandon, and Daniel.
Oh what a laugh was had… If you’ve ever wondered how many gay guys it takes to yap about Marilyn for nearly two hours, the answer to this query (and all the others above) is now finally settled…