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’17’ A Small Hookup Story with a Heavy Echo – A movie review

26/11/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

1717 is a short film linked above that follows a 17-year-old boy who moves through the world like a ghost in his own life—barely seen at school, barely understood at home, and desperate for any kind of touch that feels real. His choice to look for intimacy through a gay hookup app isn’t framed as scandalous or reckless; instead, it feels like a quiet attempt to carve out a place in a life that has given him very few.

What stands out most isn’t the encounter itself, but the emotional weather around it—the fog of loneliness, the hunger for connection, the naïve hope that someone behind a glowing screen might offer more than just a moment.

17’s energy is subdued, almost muted, and that’s where it draws both its power and its criticism. For some viewers, especially those who came of age in different decades, different towns, and under different skies, the boy’s isolation feels unfamiliar—almost alien.

Comments shared on the YouTube site paint a striking contrast.   

One person remembers high-school hookups as easy, fun, and far from dangerous—daylight rendezvous in parks, coffee shops, no sneaking, no fear, and certainly no sense of doomed anonymity. Another speaks with the warmth of someone who grew up in an unexpectedly accepting 1980s southern town, surrounded by teammates who doubled as protectors, friends who doubled as lovers, and teachers who acted as quiet guardians steering them toward connection rather than harm.

Those memories swirl like bright brushstrokes beside the film’s more washed-out palette. And they illuminate something the film seems to ache with: the absence of guidance.
The boy in the story wanders alone. The men remembered in the comments never had to.

The short becomes a kind of mirror—showing not just one boy’s experience, but the widening gap between generations of queer youth: those who had safety and those who simply hope for it.17

 

What does ’17’ capture well

  • The vulnerability of digital-first intimacy.
    The app isn’t painted as a villain, but it’s no mentor either. It’s a door that opens onto anything.

  • The uneasy blend of hope and risk.
    Anyone who remembers their first leap into adult desire—whether in a park, a car, or behind an anonymous username—will recognise the trembling, the anticipation, the wish that this stranger might see more in you than you’ve ever been shown before.

  • The quiet aftershock.
    The film’s emotional landing isn’t melodrama, just the heavy blink of a boy realising that not all touches heal.

What Holds ’17’ Back

Some viewers found it forgettable—too small, too contained, too focused on the moment and not on the story around it. The boy’s inner world remains a locked box; we watch him, but we don’t fully enter his thoughts. The encounter is more event than a journey.

For those whose youth was full of connection—who knew freedom, camaraderie, even joy—the film may feel dim, almost foreign. “Where is the spark? Where is the adventure?” they ask. “Where is the pack of beautiful, outrageous friends?”

Perhaps that’s the point: not every generation gets a pack.

A Sadness That Lingers

The strongest emotional thread in the comments is grief—not just for the boy in the film, but for today’s LGBTQ+ teens who often move through adolescence feeling hunted by danger, misunderstood by family, or worn down by warnings. In some ways, this short film becomes a tiny elegy for what many young people feel they lack: guidance, community, freedom without fear.

Where earlier generations had gatekeepers who protected them, today’s young people often meet only algorithms.

The film is small, yes—but its sadness is proportionally large.

Final Thoughts

This isn’t a film about a hookup.
It’s a film about the absence of connection—the kind that makes first intimacy feel safe rather than perilous.

Whether or not it resonates depends entirely on the life you bring to it.
For some, it reflects their teenage years back at them with eerie accuracy.
For others, it will feel like a dim shadow of a youth that was thrilling, communal, and defiantly alive.

Either way, it speaks to a truth worth sitting with:
Young queer people deserve more than apps and anonymity.
They deserve mentors, circles, friendships, joy, and a world that doesn’t make connection a gamble.

And maybe, in its quiet way, the film reminds us that loneliness is not a coming-of-age requirement—it’s a societal failure that can still be undone.

 

  • Director
    • Jacob Biggerstaff
  • Writer
    • Jacob Biggerstaff
  • Stars
    • Brady Box
    • Rob Faubion
    • Matthew Boyd Moore

 

Links:

  • Elliot Loves [2012]
  • “17” (Gay Short Film)
  • IMDB – 17

Filed Under: Movie Reviews Tagged With: coming-of-age themes, digital intimacy, gay representation, hookup culture analysis, LGBTQ film review, modern adolescence, online dating risks, queer youth, short film critique, youth loneliness

Elliot Loves [2012]

20/11/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Elliott LovesIn the quiet space between childhood and adulthood lies the pulse of Elliot Loves (2012) — a film that moves in soft rhythms, layering memory and longing, and quietly asks: what does it mean to seek love when the world is still defining you?

The Premise

According to IMDB, the film follows the life of a Dominican-American named Elliot in two stages: first as a young boy trying to bond with his young mother; then as a 21-year-old in New York City searching for love. IMDb+2IMDb+2
It premiered on May 4, 2012, at the Miami Gay & Lesbian Film Festival. IMDb+1

Why it matters

What draws me into Elliot Loves is its layered structure. The childhood scenes ground Elliot’s longing in something elemental: family, home, identity. Then the adult version of Elliot moves through the city, the party scene, the crushes, the vulnerabilities — and we see how that early longing echoes into his search for connection.
The film doesn’t shout its themes; it gently lets them surface. The immigrant-American experience, the queer coming-of-age, the dual identity of being from one culture and in another — these are woven into Elliot’s life rather than placed front and centre.
For anyone who has felt out of sync with their environment, or who has carried childhood memories like soft, persistent ghosts, this film resonates.

Key Highlights

  • The dual-timeline structure lends the film a reflective tone, as childhood and adulthood become mirrors of each other.

  • The city becomes a character: New York isn’t just a backdrop; it’s a terrain of possibility and uncertainty for adult Elliot.

  • The mother-son dynamic grounds the emotional core. That early bond — or its absence — colours everything that follows.

  • Honest, vulnerable performances give us someone we root for, someone whose flaws and hopes are visible.

  • The film engages with identity in a lived, nuanced way: Dominican-American, queer, young, and searching. It doesn’t reduce Elliot to labels; it invites empathy.

My Personal Take

Watching Elliot Loves felt like touching a memory from two different angles: the whimsical childhood side (with its innocence and unspoken desires) and the grown-up side (with its awkwardness, hope, and fear). I found myself rooting for Elliot. I found myself reflecting on my own past — on my own longings, silent and spoken.
I also appreciated how the film doesn’t resolve everything. The search for love remains open-ended. It suggests that growing up isn’t about reaching a destination — it’s about the persistence of the question: “Can I find connection? Can I belong?”
If you’re in the mood for a film that whispers instead of shouts, that invites you into someone’s interior life rather than presenting spectacle, Elliot Loves is a worthwhile journey.

Who Should Watch It

  • Viewers interested in queer cinema and coming-of-age stories with nuance.

  • Anyone exploring the immigrant or first-generation experience in the U.S.

  • People who enjoy character-driven drama over action-heavy plots.

  • Those who like films that give you room to reflect rather than being told every detail.

Final Thoughts

Elliot Loves is quiet but not small; introspective but not insular. It invites you into a moment — or many moments — of a life in flux, anchored by memory, identity, and the longing for love. In its dual structure, it captures something many of us feel: the child who once was, still shaping the adult who becomes.
I’m glad I found it. I think you might be, too.

 

Links:

  • IMDB Eliot Loves
  • YouTube Eliot Loves
  • Boy Saint (2018) – Movie Review

 

 

 

 

 

#ElliotLoves #ComingOfAge #QueerCinema #LGBTQFilm #DominicanAmerican #IndependentFilm #NYCFilm #DualTimeline #FilmReview #ImmigrantExperience

Filed Under: Movie Reviews Tagged With: 2012 film, coming of age, Dominican American, dual timeline movie, Elliot Loves, immigrant experience film, independent film, LGBTQ film review, New York cinema, queer drama

Kiss Me Softly – Movie Review

19/08/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

 

Kiss Me SoftlyIn Anthony Schatteman’s tender 16-minute short Kiss Me Softly, music becomes both a weight of expectation and a pathway to self-discovery. The film follows Jasper (Ezra Fieremans), the son of a well-known schlager singer, who longs not just to inherit the family legacy, but to express it in a way that feels true to himself. It’s a familiar generational clash—tradition against individuality—but Schatteman infuses it with the intimacy of queer awakening.

Fieremans carries Jasper with a mix of quiet restraint and smouldering vulnerability. His performance hints at the complexity of growing up in the shadow of someone else’s stage, while harbouring a desire to step into the spotlight on his terms. Tim Bogaerts offers a grounded counterpoint, bringing warmth and sensitivity to the role of Jasper’s love interest. Their chemistry provides the film’s most affecting moments: unspoken touches, fleeting glances, and the courage found in a kiss.

Marijke Pinoy, as the mother, delivers a gentle but firm portrayal of familial expectation—never villainous, but still bound by tradition. Her presence adds texture to the story, reminding us that pressure often comes from love, even if misplaced.

Visually, the film is sleek and atmospheric, balancing the bright artifice of the schlager world with the softer, more natural palette of Jasper’s private life. Schatteman’s direction avoids melodrama, instead capturing a tone of quiet rebellion. At its heart, Kiss Me Softly is not just about claiming a song, but about claiming identity—the courage to love, to sing, and to exist authentically.Kiss Me Softly Kiss Me Softly

Though short, the film lingers long after its closing note. It’s a love letter to the act of living truthfully, and a reminder that even within the most glittering traditions, there’s always room for a new voice.

Director – Anthony Schatteman
Writer – Anthony Schatteman
Stars – Ezra Fieremans, Tim Bogaerts, Marijke Pinoy

 

 

Links:

  • IMDB – Kiss Me Softly
  • Peccadillo Film – Kiss Me Softly
  • ACE Movie Review

 

Filed Under: Movie Reviews Tagged With: Anthony Schatteman short film, Ezra Fieremans, gay short film, Kiss Me Softly review, LGBT cinema, LGBTQ film review, Marijke Pinoy, queer short films, schlager singer film, Tim Bogaerts

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