In Crazy, Marc-André Grondin is Zac, a young man with gay feelings. The film follows him from his teens to his twenties as he deals with his family and his own feelings. From his mother’s belief that he has a special spiritual connection and power to his older brother’s drug use and his father’s Patsy Cline obsession. Well worth watching, French-Canadian with subtitles.
The Fluffer
Aspiring film maker Sean (Michael Cunio) comes to Hollywood but has no success breaking into the business. Renting “Citizen Kane” he discovers the box actually contains a copy of “Citizen Cum.” Sean becomes fascinated with the star of the film, Johnny Rebel, aka “Mikey” Racini (Scott Gurney). Sean takes a job as a camera man at Men of Janus video which produces Johnny Rebel’s films and becomes the titled “Fluffer” for gay for pay Mikey. Sean soon finds that the object of his obsession isn’t the dream man he’d hoped. The movie also has a number of quick cameo appearances of actual gay porn stars.
Love is the Devil
Derek Jacobi stars as British painter Francis Bacon in the biographical work Love is the Devil with Daniel Craig as George Dyer, a burgler whom Bacon takes to bed when he discovers him breaking into his house. Bacon eventually loses interest in the younger, less sophisticated man. Dyer for his part begins to self destruct with drugs and alcohol as he realizes he doesn’t fit into Bacon’s world and he’s being gradually pushed aside.
A couple more caps after the jump. Possibly NSFW.
Outing Riley
Bobby Riley (Pete Jones), an Irish Catholic, is trying to come out to his three brothers, one of whom is a priest, with the help of his well meaning but interfering sister. The 2004 film chronicles his attempts to come out and his attempts to put it off at the urging of his sister, his lover, and his lesbian “beard.” We see the way his brothers (Nathan Fillion, Stoney Westmoreland, Dev Kennedy) deal with the situation (or not) in different ways. Not the greatest movie ever, but entertaining.
Skin and Bone
Skin and Bone (1996) follows Harry (B. Wyatt), Dean (Alan Boyce), and Billy (Garrett Scullen), three male prostitutes who work for a female pimp who keeps a tight reign on her boys. When they try to leave and go on to knew lives, they find themselves under her brutal thumb. If the DVD quality were a bit better, the eye candy might save the film, but as it is, it’s a bit long and a bit slow.
The Mostly Unfabulous Social Life of Ethan Green
The Mostly Unfabulous Social Life of Ethan Green follows the dating trials and tribulations of the comic strip hero Ethan Green (Daniel Letterle). Ethan tries to find happiness through a string of boyfriends (David Monahan, Dean Shelton, Diego Serrano) with the help of his lesbian pal Charlotte and The Hat Sisters.
Boy Culture
“X” (Derek Magyar) is the nameless gay prostitute who narrates Boy Culture. He’s built a business around 12 wealthy clients and a perfect little gay family with his two roommates Andrew (Darryl Stephens) and Joey (Jonathon Trent). “X” can’t bring himself to show his feelings for Andrew, but pours his heart out about it to Gregory (Patrick Bauchau), one of his older, wealthy clients. An enjoyable movie.
Coffee Date
In Coffee Date, Todd (Jonathan Bray) is a straight guy whose free loading brother (Jonathan Silverman) sets him up with an internet dating ad. Getting to the coffee shop for the blind date, Todd realizes that his date Kelly (Wilson Cruz) is a guy and his brother placed the ad in the “men seeking men” section. Todd and Kelly get back at his brother by pretending to be a couple, but soon the joke spirals out of control as everyone in Todd’s life quickly becomes convinced that he’s gay and that his protestations of being straight are part of his being in denial. A cute independent comedy.