Thursday, May 17, 2018

Love, Simon


DIRECTOR:  GREG BERLANTI  LEAD CAST:  NICK ROBINSONS, JENNIFER GARNER, JOSH DUHAMEL, KATHERINE LANGFORD, ALEXANDRA SHIPP, LOGAN MILLER,
KEIYNAN LONSDALE  DIRECTOR:  GREG BERLANTI  SCREENWRITER: ELIZABETH BERGER, ISAAC APTAKER, BECKY ALBERTALLI  PRODUCER:  TIMOTHY M. BORNE  EDITOR:  HARRY JIERJIAN  MUSICAL DIRECTOR:   ROB SIMONSEN  GENRE: ROMANTIC COMEDY-DRAMA  CINEMATOGRAPHER:  JOHN GULESERIAN  DISTRIBUTOR: 20TH CENTURY FOX  LOCATION:  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA  RUNNING TIME:  118 minutes
Technical assessment:  3.5
Moral assessment:  2.5
CINEMA rating: V16
Seventeen-year old Simon Spier (Nick Robinson) looks every inch a wholesome high school boy you’d feel safe dating your daughter.  He has nice friends, and leads a pretty normal life with his cool and caring parents (Jennifer Garner and Josh Duhamel) and younger sister Nora (Talitha Bateman).   But he has a secret—he is gay, and this is known only to Blue, an anonymous male online friend he exchanges text messages with.  His secret, however, is not to remain one for long, as a disgruntled classmate discovers it and tries to blackmail him.  Simon is left with no choice but to emerge from the closet—something he is not quite ready for.
With Avengers: Infinity War, Deadpool 2 and other CGI-propelled movies currently showing, it’s quite a relief to find something that’s about real people with real struggles and living real lives—totally devoid of the zap-pow-clunk! of the superhero blockbusters.  With the exception of the blackmail device which strikes us as somewhat artificial, Love, Simon comes across as real as life can be,  Love, Simon wants to be a simple, uncomplicated coming-out story that subtly tries to portray a gay character under a gentle light. With its well-chosen cast, it’s a likable and almost charming movie populated by nicely rounded characters—just like any other romantic comedy about high school romance, except that here it’s a boy-meet-boy thing.
And here is where—for the sake of the movie’s teen target market—CINEMA steps in to spoil your fun.  The movie shouldn’t be taken as mere entertainment because its theme—for anyone who sees the bigger picture of the human situation—is never to be taken for granted.  It is absolutely right that gay persons should be loved and not only accepted for what they are, but it is wrong to assume that it is enough to be affirmed in one’s sexual orientation in order to be fulfilled as a human being.  Young audiences need adult guidance to be able to understand Simon’s struggles and see beyond his self-acceptance.  Love created us for a purpose beyond pleasure or conceit, thus we strive to fulfill that purpose, whether we are male or female, hetero or homo.