Gay brothers movie
The indie drama Tiger Orange follows Chet (Mark Strano) and Todd (Frankie Valenti, better known to some fans as gay individual film superstar Johnny Hazzard), two estranged gay brothers who grew up in a small town in Central California to a homophobic, working class unattached father.
Now adults, the two could not have turned out more differently. Chet, the older brother, runs the family hardware store and still lives in their childhood home where he’s cared for their ailing father until his recent death. Todd ran off to Los Angeles at eighteen and never looked back. He’s burned the candle at both ends his entire being and now homeless, with no cash, he heads back up the coast to the home and the brother he left behind.
The surprise visit shakes up Chet’s safe and guarded life and the two of them living under one roof becomes a recipe for disaster. Soon Todd is stirring up trouble in town with his sexual misadventures and in-your-face bravado and Chet struggles to preserve him in check while slowly unraveling himself.
As their long-simmering resentments boil to the surface, the brothers are forced to not only hash out their differences but begin to examine the common bo
Movies like My Brother's Shoes
Filmmaker Mike Mosallam is hoping to accentuate the importance of family, both biological and chosen, this Lgbtq+ fest Month with one of his most beloved projects.
HuffPost got a sneak peek at “Brothers,” which hits the streaming service Dekkoo on June 16, via the clip above. Written and directed by Mosallam, the short clip comprises both scripted scenes and modern dance to relay a coming-of-age story about two Arab Muslim brothers (played by Martijn Sedgfield and Viktor Simon).
In the film, their relationship is tested in young adulthood after one of them is revealed to be gay. Ultimately, their bond wins out against adversity.
“Brothers” had its world premiere in 2018 and was screened to superb acclaim at the Beirut International Film Festival, the ShanghaiPRIDE Production Festival and Nevada’s OutWest, among other festivals.
Mosallam said he hopes that releasing “Brothers” on a streaming platform during Event will remind viewers that devotion conquers all as they commemorate after more than a year of pandemic lockdown and political strife.
Mike Mosallam/Dekkoo
“Family is an important part of every Homosexual person’s life,” he told HuffPost. “What is clear to me now, in
Brothers in Love and in Bed
Film chronicles sexual relationship of two siblings, and the tensions below
Writer/director Christopher Munch is probably best established for his remarkable 1991 feature “The Hours and the Times,” which depicted the possible sexual connection between John Lennon and Brian Epstein.
Munch’s equally nice new film, “Harry and Max,” also looks at an unconventional queer affair of music industry types––this time featuring the romantic longings of two lad band-type performers, who also happen to be brothers.
Harry (Bryce Johnson) is a singer in a musical group who has arrived to take his younger brother Max (Cole Williams) on a weekend camping trip. Harry is suffering from career angst about a brand-new album, and dealing with the unhealthy rigors of show-business life. Max, in contrast, is a pop star who recently had a hit album and now deciding whether to go to school or re-enter the music industry.
Munch makes these siblings two sides of the same coin. Both are at a crossroads in their lives, and Max distracts himself by exploring physical love with his brother. This is complicated by Harry’s increasingly mo