A Youtuber posts an irreverent video trolling a megachurch pastor, in defence of his gay twin brother. He is vilified by society, tried in court, and pitted against a culture that threatens ... Read allA Youtuber posts an irreverent video trolling a megachurch pastor, in defence of his gay twin brother. He is vilified by society, tried in court, and pitted against a culture that threatens to destroy his family.A Youtuber posts an irreverent video trolling a megachurch pastor, in defence of his gay twin brother. He is vilified by society, tried in court, and pitted against a culture that threatens to destroy his family.
- Awards
- 5 wins & 2 nominations total
Muhammad Fadzri
- Dol
- (as Fakkah Fuzz)
Featured reviews
In #LookAtMe Ken Kwek covers dark issues in Singapore revolving around religion, LGBTQ+, social media and family, and the film allows the viewers to feel what it is to live in a country where living authentically can not only make someone's life very difficult but also destroy their family. The story takes dark turns and makes the viewers sad and shocked, but it's tied in with humor, family love and hope, which makes it a compelling watch. Among the stellar cast Yao plays both the twin brothers brilliantly, while Pam Oei delivers the most poignant performance as their mother. A very important film for Singapore and the world.
A gripping story on a straight teenager's stance for LGBTQ+ rights, motivated to defend his own twin brother (excellent performance by Yao doing both roles). This is a film that delivers drama, humour, irony and most importantly hope. It's not a film just about the Community, but a film about the importance of justice, truth about hypocrisy and why humanity is critical in our crazy world to stay sane. May I just call out the outstanding performance by all the cast members and artistic vision by Ken, what an incredible achievement to have been produced with limited funding. Thought provoking and excellently produced, please go watch it!
If you need to get on an emotional rollercoaster for the kicks, there's no better way than to watch this film. Ken Kwek manages to rile you up first with righteous indignation, then lull you into complacency with impeccably timed comic spells, then shock you into gritting your teeth and gripping your seat.
#LookAtMe is storytelling mastery par excellence. Don't let the fact that it's been banned in its country of origin distract you from thoroughly enjoying this film. That meta fact acts as a teaser for some of the weirder things depicted in the film, which, if you live in Singapore with your eyes and ears open, you'd know to be fairly accurate.
Catch it or regret it!
#LookAtMe is storytelling mastery par excellence. Don't let the fact that it's been banned in its country of origin distract you from thoroughly enjoying this film. That meta fact acts as a teaser for some of the weirder things depicted in the film, which, if you live in Singapore with your eyes and ears open, you'd know to be fairly accurate.
Catch it or regret it!
How often do we get a Singaporean film that dares to take on religion, gay rights, privilege, prison conditions? No need to answer me. The censorship board already has. (Thanks, guys! Love you too.)
#LookAtMe is a necessary film for this age of crazy. I love how it tackles so many uncomfortable things about Singapore and Singaporeans, how it growls at all the rampant hypocrisy, how it weeps for it. Made me laugh and cry and hiss and want to throw rocks at people and people at rocks. Excellent cast wrung emotions from me I wasn't aware I still had.
I wish more people could see it! Yes, that deserved an exclamation point.
#LookAtMe is a necessary film for this age of crazy. I love how it tackles so many uncomfortable things about Singapore and Singaporeans, how it growls at all the rampant hypocrisy, how it weeps for it. Made me laugh and cry and hiss and want to throw rocks at people and people at rocks. Excellent cast wrung emotions from me I wasn't aware I still had.
I wish more people could see it! Yes, that deserved an exclamation point.
Being such a long while where I have been at a movie where the audience laugh as one, cheered and exclaim together.
A simple production that is at times raw, it hits you. It does showcase some underlying themes of the society that most people are afraid to know, thread or understand or challenge.
A lot of foreigners don't understand why Singaporeans got so much to complain about Singapore. Maybe this movie can help share such insights.
However, audience are to be careful with the opening statement. It's a fictional storyline, with inspiration from some real events. After all Amos is now locked up in US for his own crimes and is definitely not anyway close to be a hero in Singaporeans eyes.
A simple production that is at times raw, it hits you. It does showcase some underlying themes of the society that most people are afraid to know, thread or understand or challenge.
A lot of foreigners don't understand why Singaporeans got so much to complain about Singapore. Maybe this movie can help share such insights.
However, audience are to be careful with the opening statement. It's a fictional storyline, with inspiration from some real events. After all Amos is now locked up in US for his own crimes and is definitely not anyway close to be a hero in Singaporeans eyes.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 48 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content