Griff (Daniel Chilson) and Pete (Don Handfield) are two frat boys in an uncertain relationship. Pete has moved out of the frat house and wants Griff to step up and recognize their relationship while Griff is still firmly in the frat closet. After a heated argument, Pete gets severly beaten outside a gay coffee house. The movie’s pretty good at following Griff’s coming to grips with what’s happened to his lover and with his own life. Good movie, good frat boy eye candy. Defying Gravity (1997).
Scott Bakula
Clive Barker’s Lord of Illusions (1995) follows a case of detective Harry D’Amour (Scott Bakula). D’Amour, who has previously been involved with the supernatural, heads from New York to LA to track a man suspected of insurance fraud. Along the way he stumbles into an occult battle that started 13 years before. He’s hired by the wife of Swann, the world’s most famous magician, to protect him from from the cult that surrounded the evil magician he helped defeat.
The movie is not bad, plenty of blood, plenty of guys running around scantily clad. Lots of scenes with Scott Bakula without a shirt. What more could you want?
Fargate Video
Found some Ben Browder on You Tube:
200 American
In 200 American (dollars, that is), Conrad (Matt Walton), a gay executive, has been dumped by his boyfriend and turns to Ian (Sean Matic), an Australian hustler, for sex and companionship. Infatuated with the young man, Conrad hires him to be a photographer’s assistant at his company in exchange for sex a couple of times a week. Ian’s employment doesn’t sit well with others in the company at first, but then he catches the eye of the art director (Anthony Ames) he’s assigned to work for (and who doesn’t know about his career as a prostitute).
Almost Normal
A gay, 40-something professor (J. Andrew Keitch) is in an accident and wakes up to find himself transported back to his senior year in high school. This time around, it’s an alternate universe where eveyone is gay; including his high school crush (Tim Hammer). Of course, never one to be normal, our hero falls for a girl. Ah, gay high school, complete with bullying of heterosexual boys. . . . Almost Normal.
Interesting concept, not the best movie ever, though there’s some decent eye candy. I guess it’s supposed to make straight people think, but the message is delivered with a 2 x 4. The short film “Shame No More” was better delivering the same message.
The Trip
Alan (Larry Sullivan) is a young Republican in the halcyon days of Richard Nixon’s regency. He meets Tommy (Steve Braun) a gay activist he tries to interview for a book about the gay lifestyle of the time. Naturally, Alan falls for Tommy and their relationship comes to be after Alan has already turned in his anti-gay book to his publisher. Thinking the book will never be published, Alan doesn’t tell Tommy. And then along comes the hate mongering, she-demon Anita Bryant and the publisher dusts off the book. Many years later, they reunite and take the road trip they’d discussed a little too late.
Jill St. John puts in a small but hilarious performance as Alan’s accepting mother.
Rupert Everett
Rupert Everett in Cemetary Man (1994) aka Dellamorte Dellamore as a cemetary caretaker who has to kill the dead that rise again in his cemetary each night. He meets a lovely widow who just has to have sex with him on her husband’s grave. Can you guess where that goes? Zombie gore galare.
Dorian Blues
Dorian Blues (2004) follows the trials and tribulations of Dorian (Michael McMillan) a young man struggling to come to terms with his (wait for it. . . .) sexuality. In a home filled with an overbearing, opinionated father (Steven C. Fletcher), an oblivious mother (Mo Quigley), and a jock, football hero, younger brother (Lea Coco), Dorian suddenly realizes one night why he’s different. The film has some hilarious moments and the younger brother’s (sometimes misguided) support is great. Well worth watching as Dorian tries therapy, religion, and just plain snarkiness to deal with his problems.