Boyfriends (film) explained

Boyfriends
Director:Tom Hunsinger
Neil Hunter
Producer:Tom Hunsinger
Neil Hunter
Starring:James Dreyfus
Cinematography:Richard Tisdall
Editing:John Trumper
Distributor:First Run Features
Runtime:81 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

Boyfriends is a 1996 British independent film. Three gay couples, all of whom are suffering relationship problems, spend a weekend at the seaside and learn how to deal with their issues from each other. The film was written and directed by Tom Hunsinger and Neil Hunter. The film was James Dreyfus' last role as an unknown before taking the part of Constable Goody in The Thin Blue Line. The film also starred Mark Sands, Michael Urwin, Andrew Ableson, David Coffey, Darren Petrucci and Michael McGrath.

Plot

Paul, Matt and Will, three best friends decide to go on holiday together. Paul (James Dreyfus) brings his lover Ben, but their five-year relationship is unstable owing to Paul's continued moodiness over the death of his brother Mark; Matt brings Owen, with whom he wants a lifelong relationship but whose boisterous personality doesn't suit him; and Will brings Adam, a 20-year-old one-night stand. Mark's lover also comes along for some sense of closure.

Cast

Only the seven main characters and Mark appear throughout the entire film.

Soundtrack

The film's closing music is Dinah Washington's I Wish I Knew the Name (Of the Boy in My Dreams)".

Critical reception

Boyfriends won the 1996 Best Featured Film Award at the Torino International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival. General critical reviews were mixed, with one describing the film as "a biting, shrewd and scathingly funny dissection of gay relationships".[1] Another critic, however, wrote "Boyfriends suffers from too many soap-opera-like subplots that seem set up to create tension".[2]

References

  1. Guthmann, Edward (29 August 1997), `Boyfriends' Goes to the Unsettled Heart of Gay Relationships, San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 6 January 2007.
  2. Russo, Lea, Boyfriends review, Boxoffice.com. Retrieved 6 January 2007.