4 reseñas
This ambitious student feature, shot at the University of Toronto, holds an important place in the history of independent Canadian film making. It was the first Canadian film to be invited to the Cannes film festival. It is also an important early film touching the subject of homosexuality.
- hausrathman
- 18 feb 2003
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It's a very interesting movie. The story is not good at all and the screenplay seems to be written by a 5 years old; but the cinematography is beautiful and artistic value of the movie for extenze the lower qualities of the storytelling. I'm talking I'm talking I'm talking here. There is a sort of homosexual arousing that's in the movie which is not so interesting ain't that the same time that fascinates has a team of the movie but it's more about teenagers all together seeing what they can do unless they make a mess out of their lives. Bravo for artistic value here; I see a few times more intensively than I did not for the first time. Definitely.
- mrdonleone
- 7 may 2020
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This film was shot at Sir Daniel Wilson Residence at the University of Toronto with a cast of amateur actors. I was at Sir Dan's at the time: most of us trooped out to see it later in the year - and were rewarded with a couple of nude scenes that were mildly titillating then and would be positively tepid today. The movie is being flagged under headings like "gay interest" and "shower scene" - and it's noted that it was screened at Cannes. For all these reasons, it may have a modest degree of sociological/political/cultural interest. But be in no doubt: this is an amateur effort. I found the script painfully naive when I viewed the film 40 years ago - and it must be a profound embarrassment today. Not worth your time unless you're into the history of Canadian cinema.
- geburkowski
- 1 jul 2007
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At the University of Toronto new student Peter develops a 'relationship' with student Doug. Considered something of a milestone of English language Canadian cinema writer/producer/director David Sector's 1965 feature film is a relationship drama with a difference. The difference is, that although Sector had to tread carefully, this is a thinly disguised tale of gay love. Along with it being the first English language Canadian film screened at Cannes this is the main reason it occupies a place in Canadian film history, although as a film it's neither particularly good or particularly bad. It does seem a bit amateurish in places, with poor sound quality, and doesn't match Canadian films of the same period such as Don Owen's 'Nobody Waved Goodbye'.
- filmreviewradical
- 3 jun 2025
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