7 reviews
- jaroslaw99
- Jan 8, 2012
- Permalink
I remember this movie came out when I was little kid. I watched it because it was about two high school football players, and I watched anything that had football in it. This movie took me by complete surprise because it was about a face in the crowd who was gay. I think this is the first movie I ever saw that coverd the topic of homosexuality as being OK and that gay people don't bite. This movie sure did paint a different picture for me.
- snowyprecipice
- Nov 25, 2016
- Permalink
- Dr_Coulardeau
- Jul 17, 2012
- Permalink
With so much gay hub-bub in the news lately, I couldn't help but think back to some of the first bits of gay-oriented entertainment that were considered landmark for their time... "Making Love," "An Early Frost," even "Boys in the Band." I recall how stunning and important "The Truth About Alex" was back in 1986; this was an afterschool special about a teen being gay, for goodness sake. Or was it? The story here was really about Scott Baio's character, whose best friend is the one doing the actual coming out. And, if you look at it now, the script of this piece handles that process really, really poorly. Every time poor Alex, our gay character, touches on anything to do with the gay world, it turns out to be a miserable, stereotypical experience... a trucker hits on the kid in a public bathroom; nearly the entir worlds rejects him once he comes out; and, worst of all, his trip to a decent enough gay pub prompts an INTERVENTION (!!!) by his so-called caring friends. For cryin' out loud... the kid was just having a beer and making some new gay friends. Leave him be. The producers definitely had their hearts in the right place back in '86, but couldn't they have gotten somebody gay to write the script? Look at this show today and it doesn't come across as gay-positive at all.
Scott Baio puts on an acting tour de force as Brad, a young man who
struggles to accept his best friend's homosexuality. The raw power of
the
"I'm gay!" scene rivals anything you'll see in "The Godfather, Part II,"
"A
Streetcar Named Desire," or "Stone Cold." I demand a special edition DVD
treatment of this classic, complete with commentary from Baio, deleted
scenes, interactive screenplays, a documentary on the "Making Of," and
all
features necessary to do this great film justice.
- aaronfenzi
- Oct 2, 2002
- Permalink
Scott Baio puts on an acting tour de force as Brad, a young man who struggles to accept his best friend's homosexuality. The raw power of the "I'm gay!" scene rivals anything you'll see in "The Godfather, Part II," "A Streetcar Named Desire," or "Stone Cold." I demand a special edition DVD treatment of this classic, complete with commentary from Baio, deleted scenes, interactive screenplays, a documentary on the "Making Of," and all features necessary to do this great film justice.
- aaronfenzi
- Oct 2, 2002
- Permalink