Just turned eighteen, Cliff decides that he needs to break away from the safety of homelife and embark upon an adventure. When he meets Butch, it seems as though his life will change forever. Based on the short stories of Bruce La Bruce. Read more
| Starring | Brendan Fehr, Andre Noble, Maury Chaykin, Sarah Polley |
|---|---|
| Director | John Palmer |
| Genres | Drama |
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Just turned eighteen, Cliff decides that he needs to break away from the safety of homelife and embark upon an adventure. When he meets Butch, it seems as though his life will change forever. Based on the short stories of Bruce La Bruce.
| Starring | Brendan Fehr, Andre Noble, Maury Chaykin, Sarah Polley, Marnie McPhail, Michael Riley, Haylee Wanstall |
|---|---|
| Director | John Palmer |
| Studio | PECCADILLO PICTURES |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Released | DVD: 27 Jun 2005 |
| Format | DVD |
The acting in this film is so good. Brendan Fehr and Andre Noble are so heartbraking and excellent it is impossible not to enjoy this. It is a painful and hard film to watch at times as the subject matter can be a little hard hitting- but it is so genuinely crafted that you really should watch it. It isn't really a romance drama as it was billed- it is more an exploration of those boys who we know not to be good for us. awesome independant american film making- that goes further than you might think- and doesn't try and give things a rose tint.
The acting in this film is so good. Brendan Fehr and Andre Noble are so heartbraking and excellent it is impossible not to enjoy this. It is a painful and hard film to watch at times as the subject matter can be a little hard hitting- but it is so genuinely crafted that you really should watch it. It isn't really a romance drama as it was billed- it is more an exploration of those boys who we know not to be good for us. awesome independant american film making- that goes further than you might think- and doesn't try and give things a rose tint.
Inconvenient Truth "This town has no business having a film festival," my friend Jessica said to me the other day. A Sundance virgin, she was struggling to comprehend why what seems to be New York's entire film industry and a good part of LA's too should decide to decamp to Park City, Utah every January. It's cold, inconvenient and by general consensus the facilities are inadequate. A town of less than 8,000 suddenly swells to accommodate more than 50,000 on the opening weekend of the festival Read more