How Wreck is breaking new ground for LGBT representation in horror
- Published
Thanks to Wreck, LGBT characters are finally front and centre in horror. Writer Ryan J. Brown spoke to 91热爆 Three about why this representation was important to him.
91热爆 Three鈥檚 new comedy-drama Wreck is changing the way the LGBT community is represented in horror.
尝补诲丑辞辞诲鈥檚 Oscar Kennedy stars as Jamie, who boards the cruise ship from which his sister went missing after a chase with a knife-wielding psycho in a duck costume. He鈥檚 investigating what happened to her. The more questions he asks, the more horrifying the answers.
Being in a horror series is not ideal for any character, but LGBT characters fare particularly badly in the genre. Traditionally, they鈥檙e either characters who die early, or they are the killer themselves.
With Wreck, writer and creator Ryan J. Brown wanted to change this. That is why Jamie is gay and his sidekick Vivian (played by Thaddea Graham) is a lesbian.
Both get romances, and neither becomes a mass-murderer because of their sexual identity. In fact, these identities are the only thing they are sure about in the show's uncertain world.
Why LGBT representation matters to Wreck writer Ryan J. Brown
For Ryan, having gay and lesbian characters front and centre was fundamental. He tells 91热爆 Three: 鈥淚t was there from the beginning. It's what I want to do in all of my work.鈥
The Wreck writer could see queer themes buried in the horror genre, and wanted to bring these themes to the surface. 鈥淎s a gay man and horror fan, I think horror has always been queer,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut it's always coded, and subtext. I thought, 'let's do away with the subtext.' Let's have explicit representation."
For Ryan, horror was coded queer 鈥渟ince the very beginning, since Mary Shelley.鈥 A 2019 biography of the Frankenstein author by Fiona Sampson included letters that may hint at lesbian relationships Shelley had, and subsequent LGBT creatives have found much inspiration in the work. Most famously, The Rocky Horror Picture Show turned Victor Frankenstein into Dr. Frank N Furter, whose monster is a hunk in hotpants.
Darren Elliott-Smith, senior lecturer in film and gender at the University of Stirling, monsters have often been used to represent sexual and gender difference. "To straight white males, anything different poses a threat, and needs to be projected outwards as an other," he says. 鈥淭he monster is a blank slate to do that.鈥
This draws many LGBT viewers to horror. For Darren growing up 鈥淚 realised I was gay in a time when I was told I shouldn't be open about it. I was often cast as disgusting and against the norm. So anything that depicted something abnormal I moved towards.鈥
Those who find liberation in horror often obsess over certain figures. Characters like The Babadook, Interview with the Vampire鈥檚 Lestat and Ripley from the Alien franchise have been celebrated by LGBT horror fans for years on social media and on Pride placards despite their sexualities never being confirmed on screen.
Darren identified with Carrie: 鈥淲hen I saw it as a student, I thought, 鈥業 wish I鈥檇 seen that when I was a kid.鈥 It spoke to me about feeling different, feeling attacked. The idea of being bullied, then suddenly being empowered was really transformative.鈥
With Wreck, Ryan wanted to give the gift of LGBT characters who were explicitly confirmed to be so to non-straight horror fans. One of Jamie鈥檚 first lines on the 91热爆 Three show is about his experience in Sheffield's gay scene, while Vivienne rebuffs a man by stating she鈥檚 into girls.
For Vivian actor Thaddea Graham, this was the most appealing things about the script. 鈥淚t felt really special to see representation of all kinds of sexualities joined together...It鈥檚 at the forefront and it鈥檚 not performative.鈥
How 91热爆 Three鈥檚 Wreck changes the LGBT horror game
Wreck is not the only horror project from the last decade with gay and lesbian characters. American Horror Story and The Walking Dead feature characters from across the LGBT spectrum, as do recent movies Scream, Freaky and The Craft: Legacy.
Why is horror finally embracing LGBT audiences? 鈥淢y cynical students say it's queer-baiting,鈥 Darren says. 鈥淪tudios are seeing audiences and seeing money.
鈥淥n the other hand, it's a recognition of the community. It's a good thing to see queer characters, no matter what happens to them. It's good to see representation, because I remember a time when there was none.鈥
Though recent projects often see their gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender characters survive the killing (something virtually unheard of in mainstream horror a few years ago), these characters are rarely the lead. Ryan wanted to change this when creating Wreck: 鈥淲e鈥檙e getting more representation, but it seems to be lots of sidekicks and supporting characters." That is why in Wreck, we get what Ryan called 鈥渁 Batman and Robin that are both very gay鈥 鈥 a LGBT lead and sidekick.
Similar characters are starting to appear in American movies and TV. The new version of Chucky has a gay lead character, and 2022 saw the release of They/Them, a slasher set in a gay conversion camp. The trend continues with the TV adaptation of video game The Last of Us, which has a lesbian co-lead character, while a new TV version of Interview with the Vampire promises to be more frank about its gayness than the 1994 movie.
Wreck, however, is the first UK horror series to tackle LGBT representation in this way, and differs in approach to the US shows. In most of the American works, characters鈥 sexualities are the central issue.
Wreck, in contrast, tries to reflect the reality of most real-life LGBT people, whose sexuality is just one element of their life. 鈥淗aving two gay leads in the show that isn't about them being gay, or about their sexual identity in any way, we don't see that,鈥 Ryan says.
That is not to say Wreck dismisses their identities. As the writer puts it: 鈥淕rowing up gay has equipped them to be the perfect heroes. But the story doesn't need to be about their trauma.鈥
Wreck is streaming now on 91热爆 iPlayer.
Originally published 10 October 2022.