Rating: Summary: touching and sensitive Review: this is a very touching movie watching a family unravel and finding secrets that were hidden for years it's about acceptence and becoming the person you really are finding that loveknows no bounds
Rating: Summary: Finally, a movie to make you think Review: This is one of the best recent films. The different layers filled with compassion about love, sexuality, and the need to "get away". Anyone who likes to more than just stare at the screen should see this film
Rating: Summary: a day in the life of a normal family. Review: This is the day in the life of a normal family as these days who is to say what is normal and what is not, the very handsome Chris Leavins does a wonderful job in this film, my hats off to him. This movie is a must see for anyone having problems addapting to guy friends, as everyone is different (thank God for that)we can learn a great deal from this family. Chris may God in heaven bless you. Good luck in life with what ever comes your way.Love Kenneth D. Bailey Jr.
Rating: Summary: a day in the life of a normal family. Review: This is the day in the life of a normal family as these days who is to say what is normal and what is not, the very handsome Chris Leavins does a wonderful job in this film, my hats off to him. This movie is a must see for anyone having problems addapting to guy friends, as everyone is different (thank God for that)we can learn a great deal from this family. Chris may God in heaven bless you. Good luck in life with what ever comes your way. Love Kenneth D. Bailey Jr.
Rating: Summary: Secret Garden. Review: Watching The Hanging Garden, my brother brought it to my attention that the protagonist in his teenage years looked peculiarly similar to a teacher that we both had. He worked (still does) in the basement level of our school building. ... The same, I feel, can be said of the protagonist, Sweet William. The story surrounds the utter isolation of William from his family and friends. Unhappy, confused, haunted by his adolescence, trying to kill all links to his family, he is always at an emotional distance from others. This isn't simply a film about homosexuality, but one that addresses the most fundamental issues of how overwhelming our problems can become. Those problems can force us into a world of our own until others come chasing after us, or we after them; in this respect, the distinction in 'Garden' is never made clear of who pursues whom, and in the surrealistic atmosphere of the film, the interchange of pain between William and others is at once seamless and profound.
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