
It is of course not quite that straightforward and in some deliciously hilarious scenes he grins and bares almost all and penetrates Jenn just 'at the appropriate moment'. And on more than one occasion.
This is a truly delightful debut from writer/director Jonathan Lisceki who has refreshingly managed to transcend the usual cliched stereo-types that litter so many 'gay themed' comedies. Not just by the careers he gave his leads but more importantly by making Matt, and the other gay men, into well-rounded, happy and exceeding 'regular' men, albeit they had the quicker wits and more wickedly funnier lines than the odd straight man in the story. Kudos too for not falling into the trap of making Jenns a desperate fag-hag who ends up falling in love with her handsome gay best friend. After all penetration doesn't equal permanent passion. Most of the time.
Lisecki provides his cast with a fast-paced script littered with some priceless quick-fired one-liners but above all else, the reason that I laughed my socks off to this essentially heartwarming story about an alternative family was that it bucked the prevailing trend of mean-spirited comedy that I really dislike. Being nice can be real funny too.
This one gets the highest marks from me and my recommendation that most anyone would find something to love about this very witty piece whether they are gay or straight, childless or not. Go see.
★★★★★★★★★

This one gets the highest marks from me and my recommendation that most anyone would find something to love about this very witty piece whether they are gay or straight, childless or not. Go see.
★★★★★★★★★