A coming of age romantic drama set in 1972 based on real life events.A coming of age romantic drama set in 1972 based on real life events.A coming of age romantic drama set in 1972 based on real life events.
Samuel A. Levine
- Peter
- (as Sam Levine)
Matthew Walker
- Police Officer
- (as Mathew Layne Walker)
Ray Hammack
- Peter's Father
- (as Clyde Hammack)
Andrea Vaughn
- Agnes
- (as A Vaughn)
Deborah Kovarski
- Joe's Mother
- (as Deborah Kovarsky)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Ugh! If that camera shook anymore I would have had to stay in bed for a couple of days to recuperate. The sleek camera angles they tried to use turned out to be nothing more then a burden to my EYES!! To many, they used them to many times. My partner actually looked to check when it was made because the acting came right out of a bad 70's porn movie. Joe was supposed to be the tortured soul, he tortured me. Either the actors were way over the top-"Billy" or way under-"Ian and Peter". The end of the movie made me wonder why they even finished it in the first place. I'm sure the director was going somewhere deep with this movie but that person forgot their glasses during shooting.
This movie had so much going for it, I guess, if you saw it in a theatre. But the DVD is a challenge. The sound quality is so poor, even with my stereo surround equipment, that total scenes are inaudible, just mumbling. The blackouts between scenes are too long, making you feel that the movie has stopped. Then occasionally, you get to see a complete scene, well-lighted, and audible and you discover that the acting is quite good and the script is more than passable. It's unfair to rate this film by the lack of quality in the transfer from screen to DVD video. It's a mess...and it shouldn't be! Wait for another Gay Film Festival and hopefully someone will revive it. But if you're seeing it for the first time at home...forget it and rent "Latter Days", "The Man I Love", or "The Trip" instead.
The film has the merit of showing how coming out stories just recently became less problematic, even if in some environments they are still a problem not only for youths. The film is set on Virginia, US, not so long ago, 1972. Peter (Samuel A. Levine) is not properly the mostly shy young boy, being visited by the police right at the beginning of the film for sunbathing in the nude at the roof of his parents' home. Soon he'll be in college, engaging in a sex three-way story with is roommate Joe (Trevor Lissauer) and Joe's girlfriend Bess (Amber Taylor) But things will soon get bad, for the jealousy of Joe, who attacks Peter, rescued of a not very good reputed poetry professor Ian (Julio Perrilán), recovering at his place at the Eden's Curve of the title. The story's sad development can be an adviser that backlashes are always possible, for it happened only 40 years ago. True story, according to the writer. I myself was coming of age at those times, and can assure you things were not that different, even keeping out tragic endings. The film is not a must see for an already over exposed to bad ends gay community, but should remind us that things were not very good until very recently, and we must keep an eye open to have not a coming back of homophobia not so difficult at all.
I really liked this movie and gave it a score of 8 on a scale of 1 to 10. The film was a very believable story involves a young gay man coming of age in college in 1972 in either North Carolina or Virginia . Most of the characters were very good looking and enjoyable to watch. The the nude and sex scenes where shoot in a very tasteful manner, while showing the viewer the lust, sexual experimentation, and passion of their young sexy bodies. I really liked the cinematic style of shooting that was used in the movie. The events in the movie are very true to live for gay people I would recommend this film to to anyone who likes films dealing with gay life issues.
Scott in Virginia
Scott in Virginia
Others have remarked that the video quality on the DVD is poor. No argument there. I thought at first maybe I'd been spoiled by a recent visit with a friend's HDTV, but I had to squint the whole time. The sound is sub-average too. Discounting that, the film itself is quite deep, quite surreal, and the sort that will keep you very quiet while watching.
The pace is slow, which I normally despise, but in this case it enhances the whole impression. Watch it when you're NOT in a hurry.
Bryan Carrol as Billy has a screen presence I can't begin to describe. I'll want to see anything else he does.
9/10.
The pace is slow, which I normally despise, but in this case it enhances the whole impression. Watch it when you're NOT in a hurry.
Bryan Carrol as Billy has a screen presence I can't begin to describe. I'll want to see anything else he does.
9/10.
Did you know
- SoundtracksAwakening
Music and Lyrics by Tony Schueller
Performed by Tony Schueller
Recorded in Taos, New Mexico
Copyright 2003
All rights reserved.
- How long is Eden's Curve?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 33m(93 min)
- Color
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