IMDb RATING
6.1/10
2K
YOUR RATING
Love, loss and hope are tumultuously explored amidst a tranquil backdrop and asks us all the question: What is your dream?Love, loss and hope are tumultuously explored amidst a tranquil backdrop and asks us all the question: What is your dream?Love, loss and hope are tumultuously explored amidst a tranquil backdrop and asks us all the question: What is your dream?
- Awards
- 2 wins total
Ben Weaver
- Ted
- (as Benjamin Weaver)
S. Lue McWilliams
- Lilly
- (as Lue McWilliams)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
At first glance we may think we are dealing with a gay movie. But it's not like that. It is a film full of clichés in which a dying mother wants to have the perfect relationship with her children, a relationship she has not had all her life until now. Like many people facing death, she can afford to be more open-minded and emotional and closer to her children.
The fact that along the way between her boy and another boy who helps her forms a friendship that leads to sex, is not likely to convey something important in the film.
In fact, the problem with the film is precisely this poverty of the message it was trying to convey ... for this reason the film is weak, somewhere at grade 6 at most.
The two women in the movie are the only ones worthy of any mention. However, as some other user already pointed out, Laura (played by Karmine Alers) is a cliché of the control freak and her singing moment is too soapy to be taken seriously. S. Lue McWilliams, however, is great as Lily. I think she doesn't over do it - even though she has cancer, she's the one in charge of keeping the movie light and entertaining with her brutal honesty. The weakest links are obviously the men and their expressionless faces. By looking at LeMay previous work, you can tell they were chosen just because of their physique - but he failed to create any kind of connection or memorable dynamic between the two of them even when they have some "intimacy". I did not hate it, I had a good time with it and we should also appreciate the fact that homosexuality is taken as an everyday thing and not a big revelation or the heartbreaking point in a movie that was already battling with other clichés of its own.
Naked As We Came deserved so much attention.
it's a pretty emotional and beautiful!!
A very stupid, plodding, heavy-handed, badly written, badly directed, VERY badly acted (especially the "dying" mother who looks like she could wrestle lions in a circus), extremely tiresome movie about extremely unpleasant spoiled people with way too much money and way WAY too much unnecessary drama. The mother is dying. So what? People die. People as obnoxious as this bunch should die a lot sooner.
For some perverted, homophobic reason, many gay reviewers of gay movies LOVE to declare that a gay movie is not "really" gay. This is one of those movies. It isn't really a gay movie.
Oh, yeah? When two of the four characters in a movie are gay men, and the ONLY sex in the movie is between those two men (who are - of COURSE! - hot and buff and West-Hollywood hairless and gorgeous), and the two women in the movie are ugly, strident, manipulative, shrieking, raging and/or whining, moaning b!itches... THAT'S not a gay movie? Why? Because the phrase "eating out" is not in the title?
Ahhhh. NOW I understand!
For some perverted, homophobic reason, many gay reviewers of gay movies LOVE to declare that a gay movie is not "really" gay. This is one of those movies. It isn't really a gay movie.
Oh, yeah? When two of the four characters in a movie are gay men, and the ONLY sex in the movie is between those two men (who are - of COURSE! - hot and buff and West-Hollywood hairless and gorgeous), and the two women in the movie are ugly, strident, manipulative, shrieking, raging and/or whining, moaning b!itches... THAT'S not a gay movie? Why? Because the phrase "eating out" is not in the title?
Ahhhh. NOW I understand!
A quiet gem of a film--a moving, realistic, touching portrayal of a flawed family, and how they find their way back to one another in spite of their problems. Lovely message about forgiveness and acceptance--and with big unexpected dollops of humor. The acting is top-notch, particularly Lue McWilliams as a neglectful mom who finally lets herself soften and reach out to her children toward the end of her life, and Karmine Alers as her daughter Laura, filled with resentment and anger, but who lets forgiveness bring her back to her family. LeMay's direction is sure-handed and steady, letting the story unfold at its own pace and the moments of revelation be believably small, yet still beautifully affecting.
Did you know
- Quotes
Laura Garcia: You... you lost a lot of weight.
Lilly: I know. It's my coffee and cancer diet. I'm gonna write a book.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Naked as We Came: Interviews (2012)
- SoundtracksAll That You Are
Written by Karmine Alers Grego, Jimmy Greco, and Maria Christiansen
Performed by Karmine Alers
- How long is Naked As We Came?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 27 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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