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Ace [2018] – Movie Review

15/08/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

  Ace 

In ‘Ace’, a short movie, the director and cast create a quietly charged portrait of longing, fear, and the maddening poetry of unspoken desire. Set against the microcosm of a tight-knit college friendship group, the story follows Ace (Lukas Gage), the reserved newcomer who finds himself drawn—reluctantly, helplessly—to Z (Michael Felix), a longstanding member whose own guardedness mirrors his own.

This is not a film that hurries. Instead, it lingers in the silences between words, in the glance that lasts just a beat too long, in the awkward laughter masking something deeper. Gage gives Ace a vulnerability that feels almost too real at times, while Felix balances the role of Z with a mix of warmth and quiet volatility. The supporting cast, including Giselle Bonilla, Jonathan Lipnicki, and Ariel D. King, anchors the story in a believable Acecamaraderie, their interactions subtly revealing the way friendships can both protect and stifle.

The tension here is not born of melodrama but of stillness—of what isn’t said. As the attraction between Ace and Z simmers, their mutual hesitation becomes the real antagonist. Each moment they avoid acknowledging their truth only deepens the ache for what might be, and the audience is left caught in that same limbo, aching alongside them.

By the time the creditsAce roll,Ace  Ace hasn’t so much resolved as it has gently folded itself into you. It’s a story about connection as much as it is about fear, and about the fragile, human hope that the person you can’t stop thinking about might just be thinking of you too.

 

Director: Jordan Gear

Writer: Jordan Gear

 

Links:

  • YouTube – Ace
  • IMdb – Ace
  • Mrs. McCutcheon – Movie Review

Filed Under: Movie Reviews Tagged With: Ace 2018 review, college love story, film review, friendship and love, indie drama, LGBT romance film, Lukas Gage, Michael Felix, queer cinema, unspoken desire

A Sight on You (Despues de verte) – Gay Movie Review

27/06/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

 

‘A Sight on You’

A Sight on You‘A Sight on You’ is a quietly intense indie drama that feels like a whispered secret. With a careful hand and a subtle touch, it delves into the tangled emotions between two estranged brothers—Tim (Lluís Febrer) and Julio (Xavier Batista)—who reunite after a year apart. What starts as tentative reconnecting gradually shifts into something darker and more psychologically charged.

The story is straightforward on the surface: Tim welcomes Julio back into his life after a long silence. But beneath that simplicity lies palpable tension—more communicated through lingering looks and silence than words. Things take a haunting turn after Tim makes a mysterious discovery one night. The film keeps the details under wraps at first, but it casts a long, shadowy pall over everything that follows.

What makes ‘A Sight on You’ stand out is its atmospheric approach. Director [Name] employs muted, natural lighting and long, static shots that build a creeping senseA Sight on You of unease and intimacy. The house where they stay becomes a quiet battlefield, filled with unspoken truths lingering like dust in the air.

The film’s greatest strength lies in its ambiguity. The true nature of Tim’s discovery unfolds slowly, pushing viewers to question what’s real, what’s remembered, and what’s hidden beneath the surface of family bonds. It’s reminiscent of films like *The Invitation* or *Martha Marcy May Marlene*, where the threat isn’t always external but rooted in the past, in the mind, or the people closest to you.

*A Sight on You* isn’t for everyone—it’s slow, introspective, and sometimes frustratingly opaque. But if you’re willing to lean into its ambiguity and emotional subtlety, it becomes a haunting, memorable experience.

Verdict:

A slow-burning family mystery with psychological depths, *A Sight on You* sticks with you long after the credits roll. Anchored by compelling performances and a chillingly understated twist, it leaves more questions than answers—and that’s what makes it unforgettable.

Links:

  • Gay Films Matter – ‘A Sight on You’ – current viewing
  • Boys or Jongens – A Gay Movie Review

 

Filed Under: Movie Reviews Tagged With: A Sight on You, ambiguous, atmospheric film, emotional depth, family secrets, film analysis, haunting, indie drama, movie review, psychological thriller, slow burn

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