Cutter Homoerotics in Breaking Away

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Breaking Away is a 1979 coming-of-age film that profiles the life of a Bloomington townie kid named David Stoller, a recent high school graduate with no definite plans for the future who escapes from the doldrums of local life on his bicycle. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture (losing to the Meryl Streep/Dustin Hoffman divorce melodrama Kramer vs. Kramer), and is ranked eighth on the American Film Institute list of “100 Most Inspiring Movies of All Time.” The story was loosely modeled on the Bloomington local-legend cyclist David Blase.

A film trailer for Breaking Away can be viewed on the film's IMDB page.

The film captures the complicated class relationships between the town kids who call themselves “cutters” in honor of the men in their working-class families who cut limestone in the local quarries, and the students who attend IU. David, the protagonist, wants to go to college, but feels he would be betraying his class, his father, and his friends if he does not get a skilled job working with his hands. It’s only while cycling that he can evade for a while the complex tangle of his conflicting dreams and emotions.

http://www.imdb.com/video/screenplay/vi3787129113/

David idolizes the Italian road-racing bicycle team, who symbolize the possibility of an glamorous and exciting life elsewhere. The Italian team is in Bloomington to train to compete in the annual Little 500 bicycle race, a real-life Bloomington tradition started in the 1950s by the son of race car driver who won the Indianapolis 500, that raises money for college scholarships for local youth. Much to the consternation of his father, David begins emulating his heroes by spouting random phrases of Italian in a fake accent, listening Rosetti operas, greeting his mother with an ostentatious kiss ostentatious on each cheek, hugging his father, and—to cut down on wind resistance while cycling—shaving his legs. To David’s father, his son’s imitation of European mannerisms, and his obvious infatuation with a bunch of darkly handsome foreign men, seems effeminate, and possibly gay.

David is not gay, and his crush on a college girl who is clearly out of his league propels the story’s narrative arc, as he pretends to be an Italian exchange student in an ever more desperate and implausible skein of misrepresentatons through which he hopes to win her affections. There are, however, moments of genuine homoeroticism in the film, as when David and his well-muscled cutter friends swim in an abandoned quarry, in various states of undress. In the 1980s, the Bloomington Gay Alliance sponsored a men’s dance party called “The Quarries” that referenced this scene in Breaking Away, and played on the eroticizable hierarchies of unequal power that structure the fantasies invoked by the dance-party flyer—working class/middle class, less educated/more educated, place-bound/mobile; straight/gay. The Quarryland Gay Men’s Chorus draws upon the same homoerotic iconography.

Rather than being a gay movie, Breaking Away paints a portrait of Bloomington in the late 1970s that feels emotionally true, but which most IU student will never experience—one in which foreigners seem queer, and wanting to be like them seems queerer still. In the end, the triumph David experiences in winning the girl, winning the race, and breaking away, with the blessings and support of his friends and family, is a kind of “coming out” into the sort of life he wants to live. But perhaps the queerest aspect of this incredibly straight film is its portrayal of a bond between a father and a son, a young man and his mother, a cutter and his friends, that is powerful enough to survive a loved one’s decision lead a different sort of life.


Film clip of swimming in the quarries: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wi9aeWLGuEE&feature=related


Sources Breaking Away, Directed by Peter Yates (1979; 20th Century Fox: 2009). The Quarries, flyer, GLBT Student Support Services Office Files.