Directed By: Rightor Doyle
Written By: Phoebe Fisher and Lukas Gage
Cinematography: Nate Hurtsellers
Editor: David Moritz and Mike S. Smith
Cast: Zachary Quinto, Lukas Gage, Simon Rex Judith Light, Audra McDonald, Sebastian Arroyo, Christopher Reed Brown, Dominique Lawson, Joseph Bessette
A deeply repressed man, the uninhibited young man that gives him a happy ending, and all the lives they ruin along the way.
This is a single-location comedy feature around a premise that is a few scenes in a movie like Goodfellas with having to get rid of a body.
Only here more LGBTQ plus things less gangster world related. As they both involved getting rid of a dead body, someone might or might not be the reason for this unfortunate accident.
Luckily, for the audience, this film ends up being a witty, screwball comedy, essentially about acceptance and being comfortable in your own skin.
It’s nice to see Zachary Quinto cut loose throughout his career, especially in the beginning, he always played a villain in the show, heroes, and other rules he has always looked or acted so deadly, serious, dramatic, and imposing. That here it’s nice to see him play in a comedy. He still repressed, but allows himself to let loose in character and is clearly having fun. Pardon the pun of the street man throughout this film who is gay.
The film does stereotypes, or at least cliché, likely terminally ill gay man, but it takes a sharp and offers a more than one-dimensional portrait. I’m not only that character of other characters that afford more than just the main characters in its own way. It feels universal no one is left as a caricature and still manages to surprise.
The film is refreshing as it manages to be emotional, but still allows for it to be dark.
Co-written and co-starring Lukas Gage, in the more flamboyant, outrageous, and physical comedic masseuse.
As Lukas Gage definitely has drawn, not only a showpiece for himself, but one that allows everyone else to have their moments as what could’ve easily become a farce get into some real emotional territory.
Simon Rex makes a smash as he plays a nightmare version of what you can find on the dark web, but still manages to be funny, and Judith Light comes in as a character who could’ve been purely used for comedic relief but gives the film a poignant moment and character.
It’s not vivid, nor is it really that big or too visual but it’s fun. Want to stick around and be with these characters and route for them throughout
Grade: B
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