17th May2020

The Assistant (Film)

by timbaros

FD7A3648_RWhat happens if your boss is molesting women in his office, an office that is right behind where you sit?

This is the dilemna Jane (Julia Garner) faces in the new film ‘The Assistant.’ Jane is an assistant to the chief of a film company (he’s never seen but his presence is felt throughout the film).  It’s Julia’s first real job in film and she’s kept busy doing a wide variety of tasks during the day; making coffee, keeping the office kitchen tidy, maintaining her bosses busy diary, managing visitors, dealing with his uncontrollable wife, and, handling the potpourri of women who float in and out of his office. One of these young women, Sienna (Kristine Froseth), who has a lack of office skills, was hired by the same boss for reasons that are obvious. But when Julia appears to have had enough, she goes to HR to complain, but the HR director, who annoyingly takes a personal phone call during their meeting, tells Jane to keep her head down and focus on her role, and that she’s got a great opportunity. He lays into her that to file a claim against her boss would just wreck her career. Meanwhile her male co-workers (Jon Orsini and Noah Robbins) seem to be oblivious to the shenanigans of their boss.

The release of ‘The Assistant’ coincides with the jailing of Harvey Weinstein – it couldn’t be better timing. Garner is brilliant, but the takeaway of this film is her boss, not at all seen in the film but felt enormously throughout. Writer and Director Kitty Green has written and directed a powerful film that perfectly highlights what the Me Too movement is all about. 

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10th May2020

Crisis Hotline (Film)

by timbaros

ShadowsStill3jThe clock is ticking when a distressed young man calls an LGBT suicide hotline – but there is more to his story in the suspense-filled drama ‘Crisis Hotline.’

It’s a film cleverly written and directed by Mark Schwab. The story begins where it ends and tells the caller’s story and why he has contaced the hotline on that particular night. Simon (a very good Corey Jackson) is in his first week volunteering at the hotline office and not much has happened. But one night a young caller, sounding very distressed, threatens to kill himself. So Simon gets the caller to tell his story and the events that have led up to this very disturbing call. Danny the caller (Christian Gabriel), who is from the Midwest, is new to the big city, trying to find his feet, with a dull job and a very small apartment. Soon enough he meets sexy, hot and fun Kyle (Pano Tsaklas), who on the surface appears to have it all: a great apartment, a sexy smile and hot body, and a great job managing websites for a gay couple who have a voracious appetite for sex and all things dark. Soon enough Kyle introduces Danny to his bosses Curtis and Lance (Mike Mizwicki and August Browning). Danny then finds out more about Kyle’s line of work and what he really needs to do to keep his job and apartment. But Danny eventually gets drawn, unwittingly, into their dark games, with Kyle setting him up, which ultimately leads to the hotline call. And throughout the call the suspense builds and builds and the story gets darker and darker until the shattering, and totally unexpected, finale.

Schwab, who also produced, has a keen eye for suspense and drama, and gets great mileage from his cast. While Gabriel doesn’t quite live up to his role and seems to be sleepwalking through the film, Tsaklas owns the movie with his looks, charm, and relative ease in his complicated role as an on-the-surface good and loyal boyfriend but with a dark and dangerous streak. Mizwicki and Browning are okay, but Jackson brings much to the film as it’s his pivotal role that holds the film together. He’s actually fantastic. ‘Crisis Hotline’ throws social media, sex, love, lust, voyeurism and the dark web into one big mixing bowl to make an eerie, clever and fun film.

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02nd May2020

15 Years (Film)

by timbaros

Still 3Yoav is one angry man – so angry that he sacrifices relationships with his partner and his best friend for a life of solitude – in the new heart searing film ’15 Years.’

An Israeli production and filmed in Tel Aviv, ’15 Years’ focuses on sexy daddy Yoav (Oded Leopold) who appears to have everything a gay man would want: an extremely sexy partner of 15 years Dan (a very sexy and well-cast Udi Persi who brings comfort to the screen everytime he is on), a good job as an architect, absolutely gorgeous best female friend Alma (Ruti Asarsai), and an amazing apartment overlooking Tel Aviv. What he didn’t have was a great relationship with his parents; his mother is long gone while his father lies comatose in a local nursing facility. Then one night, while him and Dan are hosting a dinner party with all their friends, Yoav loses it. Why? Because their gay friends now have children while Alma had previously announced that she is pregnant. Yoav starts complaining that they are all turning into straight people – with families – something he’s just not into. But when Dan starts to reassess their relationship and feels he could possibly see a baby in their future Yoav doesn’t accept this and leaves and moves into a dilapidated apartment, and his life starts falling apart. His company loses a very lucrative contract, his father passes away thereby leaving wounds still open, his friends shun him, he doesn’t want to be at Alma’s side when she has her baby, and a one-night stand he has turns into a mess. Meanwhile Dan has moved on and has met a much younger guy who’s he’s really smitten with. So is Yoav and Dan’s 15 year relationship really over? Will Yoav come to his senses and realize what he’s lost?
What’s really frustrating with this film is Yoav’s anger. Sure he can be mad at the world but enough so to lose everything he’s worked for? Anyone would kill to have people like Alma and Dan in their lives – what is Yaov’s anger and demons really all about? We are never convinced. But having said that writer and director Yuval Hadadi has made a very good film with perhaps the sexiest gay couple you’ll see in a film this year, a film that really left me thinking about past relationships and what ifs.
 15 Years is now available on Online VOD Platforms-iTunes-Amazon instant Video-Google Play-Vudu-FandangoNOW
Local Cable & Satellite Providers-iNDEMAND-Vubiquity-DirectTV
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