Lost and Delirous has virtually nothing to do with The Wives of Bath, except for the names of three characters: Mouse, Tori and Paulie. While Piper is frickin' awesome in the movie, and the girl who plays Tori delivers a touching performance as well, that "oh my God is that Mouse on the OC and she still can't act" gal I could have done without. In the book she is disfigured, not pretty with perfect hair. The thing I find most unfortunate, or perhaps fortunate is a book about transgender issues became a movie about lesbians. While I certainly don't wanna see another transvestite as a psychotic killer (Silence of the Lambs anyone?), I can think of few movies that tackle the issue well. Better Than Chocolate has a wonderful male to female character who steals the film from everyone else, and I know The World According to Garp has another awesome male to female, (at least the book does, I've never seen the movie) though I seem to recall a tragic but at least respectful end to her. Then there are plenty of drag queens used for comedic effect in movies like To Wong Foo, Mrs. Doubtfire, Tootsie, Some Like It Hot, and Trick. But I can't really think of any film that tackles female to male except for Boys Don't Cry which is tragic but true so I don't really put it in the cliche category as much. It is cliched but you can't be true to real life events and have them end up singing on the hilltops.
The Wives of Bath, though disturbing, was at least unique and interesting, with vibrant characters. I just dislike the idea that someone would be so oppressed by society that they would kill another for their gender identity. That's actually exactly the same situation as the murder in silence of the lambs. People can be born into the wrong gender for them and turn out just fine. It happens every day. Just never on the big screen. And I complain that there aren't enough lesbians in TV and movies (especially that end up happy).
Having said that I think Kissing Jessica Stien is a wonderful film. I own and love it. But don't rent it to watch a lesbian film. It's not. It is the story of a bisexual girl and a bicurious straight girl in their first lesbian relationship and how it forges a deep and lasting friendship between them. When viewed as such, I see no cliche about it. Helen (who opts for the longterm lesbian relationship) gets just that at the end of the film, and she is very happy. I wouldn't say it is a film that everyone will like, but if you see it without first categorizing it as a gay film you stand a good chance of enjoying it.
-Jules
A thousand pardons if I messed up any of the transsexual/gender/vestite termanology. I do mix it up occasionally!