Get Real

Reviewed by: Glendajean

June 26, 1999

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I saw a British gay version of "16 Candles" or "Pretty In Pink" (think Molly Ringwald lusting after the prettiest, richest guy in high school).

"Get Real" is based on a play and is set in a suburban English town where the high school kids wear blue jackets and ties (boys & girls). Steve is small, witty, picked upon by the soccer jocks, and is going through angst over dealing with being gay.

He and Jeff, the BMOC, a soccor star destined for Oxford, fall in love. Most of the movie is about the tentativeness of two kids dealing with puppy love and coming out and fear of people finding out that, psst... they're gay.

No new ground broken here. But I enjoyed it, having sat through my share of straight movies like this (as a young man) and having to re-interpret all the characters for my own fantasies. Of course, Get Real is a fantasy, unlike life.

There is a sub-theme, of the anger and violence just below the surface. It's easy to tease that violence out to only gay kids, and that's not true. Adolescence is full of boys who like to beat up other kids.

But is also a reality. I remember, back in the mid-80s, seeing an original play in Austin that was based on straight boys picking a guy up at a bar and taking him out in the country and torturing him. It was a terribly written play, overdramatic, maudlin. But the the threat of that kind of violence is real (as seen by the number of such deaths in Texas that have taken place since I saw that silly play).

Get Real handled that well enough, perhaps better than could ever be expected. If you can handle teenagers in love, you might enjoy this movie which had a R rating (despite the fact that it always went to black out for the you know what scenes, did include a few let's kiss scenes, and one butt shot of the BMOC the next morning after their first night together. Raunchy stuff -- not.

 

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