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HeartDrop — When Love Presses ‘Accept’

17/10/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Heartsrop“Will love survive the silence — or will fear keep pressing decline?”

In a world where honesty often feels like a luxury, HeartDrop emerges as a quiet yet defiant whisper of truth.

This poignant and bold short film follows Dylan and Max, a young queer couple in a small town, as they navigate the complexities of identity, secrecy, and love. One person embraces their true self with courage, while the other conceals it beneath the mask of social expectations.

Between them lies a fragile thread: a hidden phone feature — their silent, secret way to express the love that words can’t.

As HeartDrop unfolds, we are asked a simple but piercing question:
Can love survive when it’s forced to hide?

The Story Behind the Screen

At its core, HeartDrop is not merely a story of young love — it’s about truth, fear, and the courage to be seen.  The film captures that delicate moment between expression and repression, between what the world expects and what the heart needs.

Created by a team of emerging queer filmmakers, it feels deeply personal — intimate yet universal. Every pause, every gesture, every vibration of a phone carries emotional weight. It’s cinema that lingers quietly long after the final frame.


🌟 Cast

  • Daniel YaqoHeartdrop

  • Will Trineer

  • Idaya Bello

  • Haig Jamkodjian

  • Tyler Holmes

  • Jacob Versace


🎥 Crew

Producers: Daniel Yaqo, Matt Latreille
Writers: Daniel Yaqo, Matt Latreille
Director: Daniel Yaqo
Director of Photography: Eliana D’Assisi
Editors: Jasmine McLaughlin, Matt Latreille
Sound Design / Mixing: Daniel Zea

1st AD: Alyssa Rose Hunt
1st AC: Lily Chiasson
2nd ACs: Alyssa Rose Hunt, Alexandra Morrison
Drone Operator: Matt Latreille
Location Sound: Kyla Marie Supat, Sophia Lam
Gaffers: Lily Chiasson, Joseph Liu
Wardrobe: Adrian Ally (Martianally)
Key Hair & Makeup: Wade Dane
Production Assistant: Karen Pascal

Extras: Wade Dane, Alyssa Rose Hunt, Holly Loggie

🙏 Special Thanks

  • UNTITLEDToronto by Flaunt Boutique Hair Salon — for providing the café location

  • The Ally Family — for providing the bedroom sets


🌈 Connect & Follow

📸 HeartDrop Short Film – Instagram
🎬 Daniel Yaqo – Instagram


💭 Final Thoughts

HeartdropHeartDrop is more than a short film — it’s an emotional exploration of what happens when love exists in the shadows.
For many queer people, it feels like a mirror: the first text that wasn’t sent, the kiss that didn’t happen, the truth that waited too long to be spoken.

Its power lies in its quietness — a tenderness that refuses to hide.
HeartDrop doesn’t shout its message; it whispers — and in that whisper, we hear something profoundly true.

 

#HeartDrop #QueerFilm #LGBTQCinema #ShortFilm #IndieFilm #LoveIsLove #QueerStories #DanielYaqo #FilmReview #ACOMSDave

Links:

  • YouTube – Heardrop
  • IMDB – Heartdrop
  • Thirteen or So Minutes: A Quiet Revolution in the Span of a Coffee Break

 

Filed Under: Movie Reviews Tagged With: Daniel Yaqo, film review, HeartDrop, identity and love, independent film, LGBTQ love story, LGBTQ+ film, queer cinema, queer storytelling, short film

Mrs. McCutcheon – Movie Review

11/08/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Review: Mrs. McCutcheon – A Radiant Short About Identity, Friendship, and Daring to Dance
By David McFarlane

Mrs McCutcheon Now and then, a short film comes along that says more in 16 minutes than some features manage in two hours. Mrs. McCutcheon, directed by John Sheedy and co-written with Ben Young, is one such gem — a heartfelt, unapologetic embrace of childhood difference, gender identity, and the bravery it takes to simply be yourself in a world that prefers conformity.

…Hey

This here, is my skin

This here is your skin

You got to be proud of that…

 

At the heart of the film is Tom — or rather, Mrs. McCutcheon — a 10-year-old child who knows, without hesitation, that the name assigned at birth does not reflect who they truly are. In a world that struggles to handle nuance, Mrs. McCutcheon strides forward in floral dresses and honesty, yearning not for attention but for belonging. Alec Golinger’s performance is luminous — tender without being twee, assured without being overly precocious. It’s the kind of portrayal that feels rare: childlike, but deeply wise.

Navigating a new school for the third time, Mrs. McCutcheon is predictably met with the usual cocktail of curiosity, ridicule, and cruelty. But amid the storm stands Trevor, played beautifully by Wesley Patten — a boy who understands what it means to be on the outside. As an Aboriginal child in a predominantly white school, Trevor’s marginalisation quietly mirrors Mrs. McCutcheon’s. Their friendship is the film’s heartbeat: subtle, sturdy, and transformative.

What Mrs. McCutcheon captures so well is the dual truth of childhood — that it can be both wildly cruel and deeply compassionate. The school dance, that almost-mythic rite of passage, becomes a stage for something far greater than a night of awkward swaying and bad punch. Without spoiling the moment, let’s just say the ending is bold, liberating, and quietly revolutionary. It left me teary-eyed and hopeful.

Technically, the film is a joy. Its cinematography bathes the story in warmth and colour, refusing to dull its vibrancy for the sake of “grit.” There’s humour, too — gentle, clever, and never at the expense of its characters. Sheedy and Young never preach, but they do remind us that courage isn’t always loud. Sometimes, it’s wearing a dress to a school dance and daring the world not to look away.Mrs McCutcheon Mrs McCutcheon

Mrs. McCutcheon is not just a celebration of gender diversity and youthful resilience — it’s a reminder that our differences are not flaws to overcome but truths to be honoured. And in today’s climate, where LGBTQ+ youth still face so many barriers, stories like this aren’t just important. They’re essential.

This award-winning short, lauded across festivals from Melbourne to São Paulo, deserves to be seen, shared, and remembered — not only for what it says, but for how beautifully it says it.

Director

John Sheedy

Writers

Ben Young

John Sheedy

Stars

Alec Golinger

Wesley Patten

Nadine Garner

 

Links:

  • YouTube – Mrs. McCutcheon
  • IMDb – Mrs. McCutcheon
  • Movie Lists

 

Filed Under: Movie Reviews, Reviews Tagged With: Alec Golinger, Australian short film, award-winning short, coming of age, diversity in film, friendship, gender identity, inclusive storytelling, John Sheedy, LGBTQ+ film, LGBTQ+ representation, Melbourne Queer Film Festival, Mrs. McCutcheon, queer cinema, Sao Paulo Short Film Festival, school dance, short film, Stream Short Films, trans youth, Wesley Patten

August (Août) – Movie Review

08/08/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Review: August (Août) – A Fever Dream of Queer Youth and Unspoken Longing
By David McFarlane

Aout or AugustThere’s something elusive, almost spectral, about August (Août), Louis Thines’ short film about youth, identity, and the electric charge of uncertain desire. Like the haze of a sun-drenched French summer, it is beautiful to look at but often slips through your fingers the moment you try to hold onto it.

Thines, who writes, directs, and stars, gives us Louis — a young man drifting between adolescence and adulthood, unsure whether the world he’s entering will accept the parts of him still forming. He visits his best friend Roxane in the south of France, and we are drawn immediately into the languid rhythms of long days, warm light, and the emotionally loaded quiet between people who are not quite saying what they feel.

Enter Jérémy (played with understated magnetism by Jérémy Papallardo), a stranger met at a party who seems to reflect all that Louis is unsure of in himself. Their interactions, captured through soft, intimate cinematography, shimmer with possibility. It’s less about dialogue and more about proximity — bodies not touching, glances exchanged, silences that thrum with meaning.

And then — a kiss. Or rather, the suggestion of one. A brief, pivotal moment when Jérémy leans in and Louis recoils, not with revulsion, but confusion. We hold our breath. And then… nothing. The moment vanishes, like a wave that never breaks.

It’s in this unresolved space that August both finds its mood and loses its momentum. The film never quite allows us to know what Louis wants, or even who he is — and perhaps that’s the point. But while ambiguity can be powerful, here it feels more like absence. As a viewer, I felt not only suspended but slightly abandoned.

Technically, though, August is stunning. From the golden palette of late afternoons to the sound design that captures the lazy hum of a southern summer, Thines has crafted a world I believed in completely. Every frame feels lived-in, every gesture natural, every moment held just long enough to suggest there is more beneath the surface.Aout or August

But narrative, like desire, needs direction. And here, August hesitates when it most needs to speak. The queer experience, especially in youth, is often defined by silences — those moments when we don’t say what we feel, or don’t know how. Thines understands this deeply. But in the end, I wanted a little more certainty, even if it was just emotional honesty.

August is a film about the in-between — between boyhood and manhood, friendship and love, self-assurance and fear. It is gorgeously observed, but narratively restrained. Whether that restraint is poetic or simply withholding will depend on the viewer. For me, it was a beautiful near-miss: tender, evocative, and frustratingly incomplete.

Still, I’d rather a filmmaker risk saying too little than too much. And I’ll be watching Thines’ future work with great interest. He has an eye — and a heart — worth paying attention to.

Aout or August

Links:

  • YouTube – Aout or August
  • IMDB – Aout or August
  • Orange Cheesecake

 


Would you like a shorter version for social media or a tagline for promotion?

Filed Under: Movie Reviews, Reviews Tagged With: Août, August, coming of age, European cinema, film criticism, French short film, gay romance, indie film, Jérémy Papallardo, LGBTQ+ film, LGBTQ+ storytelling, Louis Thines, queer cinema, queer identity, queer representation, queer youth, Roxane Hérault, short film review, summer romance, unresolved desire

The Letter Men – Movie Review

03/08/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Review: The Letter Men – A Quiet Masterpiece of Queer Remembrance

The Letter MenIt’s not every day that a story finds you — especially one as moving and improbable as that of The Letter Men. But that’s precisely what happened to director Andy Vallentine. In his own words, he stumbled across the love story of Gilbert Bradley and Gordon Bowsher while scrolling online, yet what followed was no casual discovery. It became a deeply personal pilgrimage to honour lives lived in secret, with love expressed in ink but forbidden in the flesh.

 

…No conception of what our love is…
 
…How far away we seem from the rest of the world…

 

Gilbert Bradley kept Gordon’s letters until he died in 2007, and they were then rediscovered in 2015. bringing their love story to light.

Based on the largest surviving collection of queer love letters from the Second World War, The Letter Men does more than dramatise a historical romance. It gives voice to the silenced — not in anger, but in reverence. Vallentine’s Director’s Statement reveals not only the historical weight of the story but also the emotional and ethical responsibility he felt in telling it. This isn’t opportunistic filmmaking; it’s stewardship.

The casting of Garrett Clayton as Gilbert and Matthew Postlethwaite as Gordon brings authenticity and tenderness to roles that could so easily have slipped into caricature. But under Vallentine’s hand, every gesture, glance, and silence feels earned. This is a film about longing — not just the yearning between two men separated by war, but the aching for recognition, dignity, and permanence in a world determined to forget them.The Letter Men

It’s also a visually rich experience. Oren Soffer’s cinematography is painterly, with the production and costume design capturing 1940s England not in sepia-toned nostalgia, but with a lived-in texture. Even the visual effects — subtle as they are — seem to serve the memory of these men, never overshadowing the human drama at the core.

What struck me most, however, wasn’t the historical significance — which is undeniable — but the contemporary resonance. As Vallentine notes, telling diverse, underrepresented stories is not just a moral imperative, but the very reason for making art at all. In a cultural moment where LGBTQ+ histories are still at risk of erasure or dismissal, The Letter Men becomes more than a film. It becomes testimony.

It’s a rare thing to watch a director so transparently moved by his subject and so determined to let it speak for itself. Andy Vallentine doesn’t just tell Gilbert and Gordon’s story; he listens to it. That humility, that attentiveness, is what elevates this short film into something unforgettable.

In the end, The Letter Men isn’t only about love letters. It is a love letter — to the past, to the possibility of queer futures, and to all those who wrote their truths down in hope, never knowing if anyone would ever read them.

Links:

  • IMDB – The Letter Men
  • Wikipedia – Man in an Orange Shirt
  • BBC – Forbidden love: The WW2 letters between two men
  • YouTube – The Letter Men
  • Escapade – Movie Review

Filed Under: Movie Reviews, Reviews Tagged With: Andy Vallentine, director's statement, Garrett Clayton, gay love letters, gay romance, Gilbert and Gordon, historical drama, LGBTQ+ cinema, LGBTQ+ film, LGBTQ+ storytelling, LGBTQ+ visibility, Matthew Postlethwaite, queer history, queer remembrance, queer representation, short film review, The Letter Men, wartime romance, WWII love story

Sequin in a Blue Room

06/04/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

**Exploring Desire and Identity: A Journey into “Sequin in a Blue Room”**

In the throes of the digital age, where meaningful relationships often take a backseat to fleeting encounters, the story of a young boy named Sequin unfolds with captivating intensity. “Sequin in a Blue Room,” co-written by Jory Anast and Samuel Van Grinsven, presents a nuanced exploration of teenage sexuality, obsession, and the complexities of connection in an anonymous world.

Sequin, a 16-year-old high schooler, epitomizes the hook-up generation—constantly logged in but emotionally unavailable. He glides through life in a haze of superficial encounters, ghosting ex-partners without a second thought. Yet, everything shifts during a chance encounter at an anonymous sex party. This exhilarating event unveils a dizzying world of instant gratification and unmoored sexuality, igniting a spark within Sequin that he has never experienced before.

Amidst the pulsating atmosphere of the party, Sequin locks eyes with a mysterious stranger, their connection instant and electric. However, the allure of this encounter turns to frustration when they are abruptly separated. Utterly fixated on the enigmatic man, Sequin embarks on a thrilling yet perilous mission to locate him, plunging deeper into the seductive realm of a hook-up app that threatens to consume his identity.

As he navigates the seductive landscape of no-strings-attached hookups—symbolized by the ever-alluring blue room—Sequin grapples with the risks and thrills of his quest for intimacy. His journey becomes a poignant reflection on desire, identity, and the search for genuine connection in a world that often prioritizes anonymity over authenticity. The film deftly tackles the consequences of his obsession, as Sequin finds himself in increasingly dangerous situations that force him to confront his desires and the emotional fallout that accompanies them.

In delving into these themes, “Sequin in a Blue Room” transcends the typical coming-of-age narrative. It invites audiences to ponder the impact of anonymity on personal connections and the complexities of teenage exploration in an era dominated by digital interactions. The film stands as a breath of fresh air from the Australian independent film scene, bringing forth a story that is both relatable and deeply reflective—a gripping testament to the journey of self-discovery within the chaotic tapestry of modern relationships.

Sequin in a Blue Room

Links:

  • Sequins – A gay movie review
  • YouTube – Sequin in a Blue Room
  • Amazon – Sequin in a Blue Room

Filed Under: Movie Reviews Tagged With: anonymous encounters, Australian cinema, coming of age, desire, hook-up culture, Identity, LGBTQ+ film, modern relationships, Sequin in a Blue Room, teenage exploration

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