Almost Normal
- 2005
- 1h 30min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.4/10
1.2 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA gay man in mid-life crisis seeks normalcy, but reminisces about high school, where straightness was considered deviant. Meeting a girl, normalcy becomes almost normal.A gay man in mid-life crisis seeks normalcy, but reminisces about high school, where straightness was considered deviant. Meeting a girl, normalcy becomes almost normal.A gay man in mid-life crisis seeks normalcy, but reminisces about high school, where straightness was considered deviant. Meeting a girl, normalcy becomes almost normal.
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado en total
Fotos
Mary Husar
- Louise Baker
- (as Mary Douglass)
Adam J. Jefferis
- Steven Davis
- (as Adam Jefferis)
Kendell Campbell
- Kim
- (as Kendelle Campbell)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaMichelle Mueller's debut.
- ErroresNo student hallway lockers have locks on them. During a school year they would all have locks.
- ConexionesReferenced in Las ventajas de ser invisible (2012)
Opinión destacada
The concept is potentially interesting. It is openly attempting to use the Back to the Future idea to take a gay college professor back to his high school days in a world where what's considered "normal" and "abnormal" is reversed. Unfortunately the potential is never realized.
The actor playing the central character, Brad, is likable enough. He and the actors who play students do turn in reasonably good performances given the rather lame situations and dialogue they are forced to cope with. Conversely most of the actors playing adult characters seem to suffer from major aren't-we-being-too-silly over-acting syndrome and often sound like they're reading their lines from a teleprompter that isn't keeping up.
The story blurb states that Brad "is tired of being different because he is gay" and that when he is transported back in time he becomes "almost normal." Obviously that's not what happens at all. Taking that view would seem to imply that being straight will forever be the preferred norm in any context.
In the present day he, and many others, consider him to be different because he is gay. When he goes back to his high school days he becomes straight in a fantasy world where gay is normal. Once again he's different and regarded as "disgusting" & perverted and is the object of the same sort of bullying from his peers and negative reactions from adults that he experienced in the real world.
It might have been a more interesting premise if he had retained his sexual orientation and found himself in a world where he was a normal gay kid and the victimized minority in his school were the heterosexuals. Finding himself in the majority and not having to deal with all the guilt and grief dumped on him could have been a genuine role-reversal with real implications as he decided whether the fantasy experience or his real life was preferable.
In the end it's still mainly a mediocre high school coming-of-age drama. It's still the same normal kids and the same prejudiced community standards making life miserable for the minority, even if what defines normal and abnormal has changed.
The actor playing the central character, Brad, is likable enough. He and the actors who play students do turn in reasonably good performances given the rather lame situations and dialogue they are forced to cope with. Conversely most of the actors playing adult characters seem to suffer from major aren't-we-being-too-silly over-acting syndrome and often sound like they're reading their lines from a teleprompter that isn't keeping up.
The story blurb states that Brad "is tired of being different because he is gay" and that when he is transported back in time he becomes "almost normal." Obviously that's not what happens at all. Taking that view would seem to imply that being straight will forever be the preferred norm in any context.
In the present day he, and many others, consider him to be different because he is gay. When he goes back to his high school days he becomes straight in a fantasy world where gay is normal. Once again he's different and regarded as "disgusting" & perverted and is the object of the same sort of bullying from his peers and negative reactions from adults that he experienced in the real world.
It might have been a more interesting premise if he had retained his sexual orientation and found himself in a world where he was a normal gay kid and the victimized minority in his school were the heterosexuals. Finding himself in the majority and not having to deal with all the guilt and grief dumped on him could have been a genuine role-reversal with real implications as he decided whether the fantasy experience or his real life was preferable.
In the end it's still mainly a mediocre high school coming-of-age drama. It's still the same normal kids and the same prejudiced community standards making life miserable for the minority, even if what defines normal and abnormal has changed.
- Suradit
- 1 ene 2015
- Enlace permanente
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- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 30 minutos
- Color
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By what name was Almost Normal (2005) officially released in Canada in English?
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