Get Real – Von Mann Zu Mann Inhaltsangabe & Details
Get Real ist ein Film von Regisseur Simon Shore, gedreht im Jahr in England. Das Drehbuch schrieb Patrick Wilde nach seinem Theaterstück What’s Wrong with Angry?. postconsulting.eu - Kaufen Sie Get Real - Von Mann zu Mann günstig ein. Qualifizierte Bestellungen werden kostenlos geliefert. Sie finden Rezensionen und Details. Get Real - Von Mann zu Mann ein Film von Simon Shore mit Ben Silverstone, Stacy A. Hart. Inhaltsangabe: Der jährige Steven, der eine Eliteschule in dem. Komplette Handlung und Informationen zu Get Real - Von Mann zu Mann. "Get Real" verfolgt das Schicksal einer Gruppe von Teenagern, die ihren Weg durch das. Get Real - Von Mann zu Mann. - | Großbritannien | Minuten. Regie: Simon Shore. Kommentieren. Teilen. Ein jähriger Schüler verzweifelt an seiner. Get Real - Von Mann zu Mann (Get Real): Drama/Tragikomödie von Stephen Taylor mit Stacy A. Hart/Louise J. Taylor/Patrick Nielsen. Get Real - Von Mann zu Mann. Sensible, ernsthafte, kluge und bei allen Anliegen humorvoll erzählte "Coming out"-Geschichte über zwei Jungs, die unter dem.

Get Real – Von Mann Zu Mann Inhaltsverzeichnis Video
Folgt Schneeflocke Kuschelbär? Carsten Stahl ermittelt im Cyberspace - Privatdetektive im Einsatz
Kommentar speichern. Beautiful Thing. Billy Elliot - I Will Dance. Latter Days. An Education. Breakfast on Pluto. Almost Famous - Fast berühmt.
Grüne Tomaten. Priscilla - Königin der Wüste. Best Gay Movies von comehome. To Do 90er Jahre von spanky. Die Besten Coming of Age-Filme.
Sie will ihn auch bei seinem Vorhaben, sich zu outen unterstützen. Doch zunächst traut er sich lediglich, einen anonymen Artikel über die Probleme homosexueller Jugendlicher bei der Schülerzeitung einzureichen.
Doch die Reaktionen sind alles andere als verständnisvoll. Originaltitel Get Real. Verleiher -. Produktionsjahr Filmtyp Spielfilm.
Wissenswertes -. Budget -. Sprachen Englisch. Produktions-Format -. Farb-Format Farbe. It's strange that a British film has to be sourced form the US in region 1 and letterbox format.
Neither is insurmountable but it is an annoyance. All in all, I love the film. There are far too few well-made gay-themed films even in this day and age.
Highly recommended, buy it, watch it, love it. The film is excellent and I would have given five stars but the format was wrong probably my fault in that it did not fill my TV screen but displayed at smaller size Ben Silverstone should have carried on acting rather than pursuing his legal career.
He was so handsome! Still, he probably earned much more as a lawyer! Get Real is another delight for viewers, after Beautiful Thing, and is admired by both general public and gay audience.
You will enjoy this film greatly, and will want to watch it over and over again. It is not about hot sex, violence, crime, or drugs - it is about what may be happening next door to you, or even to your own children, or what have happened to you when you were young.
When you are young and learn that you are gay it may be a nightmare, or a serious situation. You have to think about your family first, then about your friends and school-mates.
What will they all say when they get to know about you? Certainly, they won't approve - that is what you think. And your school-mates may even beat you seriously, if even not knowing yet they give you no peace with jokes and insults.
With all that you find out that you want to love and be loved. As Steven Carter, the main character, puts it, "Find someone to do it with, find somewhere to do it, and do it.
The thing is that at my age it just isn't that simple. Steven Carter played by Ben Silverstone is 16 years old, attends a school in Basingstoke in the south of England, and happens to be gay.
Only his neighbour, Linda Charlotte Brittain knows about it. Parents would not be happy, and other schoolchildren, particularly Kevin, already call Steven queer.
He is certainly a "secretive" type: never goes out with anyone, doesn't have friends beside Linda and Mark, doesn't go in for sports as other boys his age do.
His talent or at least one of them is writing, and his article about Millennium Generation wins the local newspaper award.
The film might be a bit melodramatic, but our lives are melodramatic. There might be a bit of a fairytale thrown in here and there, but again, fairytales make people feel for their heroes and learn certain lessons.
Both Get Real and Beautiful Thing are sometimes accused of being fairytales. But aren't we read fairytales in our childhood, and don't we learn a lot of good things from them?
What is wrong about a fairytale? There are surely things and words to laugh at, especially when Linda comes to the foreground. Get Real shows how difficult it can be for a teenager to come to grips with the people surrounding him; how important friends' and parents' support might be; what it takes to love another person and fight for your love; how it feels to come out to a whole crowd of people after you've been let down by the beloved one.
The language of Get Real is much easier to comprehend than that of Beautiful Thing: there is less slang, and the accent is closer to the norm which is especially good for non-British viewers.
Only the kissing scenes do not look as real as in Beautiful Thing, and that is where Get Real has its drawback. But we can surely forgive it, as the rest of the movie is beautiful.
Guess what - it would not play and I had to throw it away.
Ganz richtig! Ich denke, dass es die ausgezeichnete Idee ist.
Wie neugierig.:)
Es kommt mir nicht ganz heran. Wer noch, was vorsagen kann?