Get Real

Director: Simon Shore

Institute History

  • 1999 Sundance Film Festival

Description

Simon Shore manages the transition from television and documentary to feature filmmaking with great assurance in his debut, the captivating, gay comedy Get Real, based on Patrick Wilde’s stage success, What’s Wrong with Anger? Shore recounts an appealing tale of a teenaged schoolboy coming to grips with his emerging sexuality.
Sixteen-year-old Steven is just another teenager: He listens to the latest music, plays computer games, hangs out with friends. But Steven has a secret: He’s in love with the school’s top athlete, the devastatingly handsome John Dixon. Not surprisingly, Dixon is dating a model and is the object of every girl’s attention. Steven certainly can’t tell his parents, and none of his friends know he’s gay; he can only confide in his best pal, the overweight, feisty Linda, who wants a romance of her own. As if this weren’t complicated enough, Steven discovers that one of the girls at school has developed a crush on him. And then Dixon notices Steven’s attention.
Shore and his cast of youngsters do a
wonderful job of capturing the secret lives of his teenage characters. He penetrates the hearts and minds of people trying to understand their complex sexual yearnings, while compensating for the expectations of parents, friends, and society. Fresh, youthful, and invigorating, Get Real establishes its moving tone from the
beginning and doesn’t let go; it takes an incisive voyage into the world of a gay teenager trying to tell the world that there’s nothing wrong with being in love.


Simon Shore, Director
Simon Shore studied film at the Royal College of Art in London, where he made several short films, including La Boule, which won a British Academy Award. His work since has included documentaries and films for television. Get Real is his first feature film.

— Piers Handling, Toronto Film Festival

Screening Details

Credits

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