Ernesto, also in his mid 30's, is a Latino fork truck operator in a lumber yard, and is splitting up from his younger boyfriend, whilst at the same time he is visiting his last big romance who is in a coma and on a life support system in hospital.
Director Yen Tan (Ciao)has co-written with David Lowery a wee gem of a movie with their take on what it means to be gay ....i.e. an outsider .... in small-town America. It's an acute observation of how these men tempered their lifestyles and blended into such a straight community as they struggled not only with their sexual identity but also with their entrenched beliefs that they would never find love and happiness.
It is a refreshingly quiet and intelligent movie that starts slowly but insures that by the end you are as committed as the two men that they strike through and find the one thing that were in danger of losing: hope. Mr Tan is helped greatly by the fact that he has avoided the pitfalls of so many low budget gay movies by making some excellent casting choices. Both Bill Heck as Gabe and Marcus DeAnde as Ernesto are pitch perfect.
All in all a delightful and accomplished movie that shows (once again) that you really don't need full frontal nudity or cliched stereotypes to make a gay themed story really work. I do so hope that it finds the audience it so well deserves.
Available at Amazon
★★★★★★★★★
All in all a delightful and accomplished movie that shows (once again) that you really don't need full frontal nudity or cliched stereotypes to make a gay themed story really work. I do so hope that it finds the audience it so well deserves.
Available at Amazon
★★★★★★★★★