A controversial new James Dean biopic is officially in the works. According to THR, Brandon Flynn (”True Detective: Night Country”) has been cast as the Hollywood icon in “Willie and Jimmy Dean,” a film that promises to dig into Dean’s alleged relationship with his longtime friend William Bast.
The film is being billed less as a standard biopic and more as a love story. And here’s the kicker: it’s written and directed by Guy Guido, the same filmmaker behind the Madonna docu-drama “Madonna and the Breakfast Club.” So… interpret that however you like.
The source material? Bast’s memoir “Surviving James Dean,” published years after Dean’s death, which claims the two were more than just roommates at UCLA. According to Bast, they were lovers — albeit closeted ones, navigating the harsh social landscape of the 1950s. That detail has always lingered on the fringes of Dean’s legend, but no film has really dared to go all in on it — until now.
Guido says this won’t be your usual biopic. “It’s a quiet, often painful love story between two young men trying to figure out who they are in a time when the truth could ruin you,” he said in a press statement. That line stuck with me. Because whether you believe Bast’s version of events or not, it’s hard to deny the drama in the premise: a gay love story buried beneath the rubble of mid-century celebrity.
Flynn also weighed in, calling the project “important” for addressing the erasure of LGBTQ identities from the history of classic Hollywood. He’s right about that. These stories existed — they were just whispered about or coded to death. You don’t have to buy the entire premise of the film to understand its value as a counter-narrative. If nothing else, “Willie and Jimmy Dean” is attempting to fill in one of the many blanks left in Dean’s myth.
Of course, the question of whether James Dean was gay, bisexual, or just experimenting remains unresolved — and probably always will. Bast’s memoir is the strongest piece of evidence, but it’s still anecdotal. That said, there have always been rumors, and Dean himself once famously said, “I’m not a homosexual, but I’m also not going through life with one hand tied behind my back.”
What’s clear is that Dean was far more emotionally fragile and spiritually restless than the “Rebel Without a Cause” image suggests. If this film can tap into that vulnerability without feeling like cheap revisionism or fan fiction, it might actually amount to something. But the line between thoughtful reimagining and sensationalism is razor-thin — especially when dealing with cultural icons who can’t speak for themselves.