102 users online
 
12.08.
Show us your room! 16:36
and win a prize!
Bones 15:55
Season 1
Amber Benson 15:47
on MySpace
Musicvid 15:34
Angel and Spike
The 10 best Marvel Comics 10:38
Astonishing X-Men is on the list
FanArt Special 00:12
Buffy's Surprise Party
Another guest at BE Blow... 00:03
Guess who it is...
11.08.
New Michelle pics 21:29
She was on a party yesterday
Musicvid Special! 20:02
Today about "Cruel Intentions"
Michelle Trachtenberg 19:01
Small Mention on Access Hollywood
Bunnies! 18:45
BUNNIES!
Michelle Candids 18:07
"New Old Pictures"
Eliza Dushku 17:44
in HQ!
The Rock 16:28
And his film career
Cordy & Xander figures 11:13
From The Wish and Chosen
Summer in Australia 06:13
Summer for Supanova Again!
10.08.
Michelle Candids 20:16
New Michelle Trachtenberg Pics
Sarah Candids 20:07
Older SMG Candids
Nathan Fillion Is ... 18:43
.. The Next Bruce Campbell?
Musicvid Special! 18:17
Faith out of control
 


 

Amber Benson in Latter Days, a review!

Amber Benson stars opposite Wes Ramsey, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Steve Sandvoss and Jacqueline Bisset in this Gay-Dramedy!
Latter Days

Certificate: 15
Film Released: 2003
Film Country: United States of America
Director: C. Jay Cox
Starring:
Steve Sandvoss
Wes Ramsay
Joseph Gordon-Levitt
Rebekah Jordan
Amber Benson
Khary Payton
Jim Ortlieb
Erik Palladino
Mary Kay Place
Jacqueline Bisset

Similar Releases:
The Opposite of Sex, Sweet Home Alabama

Genres: Comedy, Drama, Gay/Lesbian


It’s hard not to think of Don Roos whilst watching Latter Days. A key player in the “chick flick” subgenre having written Boys on the Side, Love Field and Single White Female, he turned director on The Opposite of Sex, a tart, sassy little independent feature with a queer sensibility. Latter Days’ director C. Jay Cox has so far followed a similar route: first he penned the Reese Witherspoon vehicle Sweet Home Alabama before directing this particular feature, a film which wants to be tart, sassy and have a queer sensibility. Moreover, he’s even tried to up the cult appeal by filling his supporting cast with various well respected character actors best known for their TV appearances: Mary Kay Place, Amber Benson, Joseph Gordon-Levitt.

Such attitudes however never feel like anything more than mere embellishments. At the centre of Latter Days we still find a fairly unexceptional romantic tale made up of well-worn themes and traits. We have the country boy moving to the city, in this case Steve Sandvoss’ Mormon missionary on a two-year stay in Los Angeles. We have a case of opposites attracting as he falls (despite his religion’s deeply ingrained homophobia) for a promiscuous young stud who spends his days in the tightest of shorts and his nights waiting tables alongside various other aspirant models/actors/musicians. And then we have the common romantic comedy ploy of there being a cynical bet between the pair’s initial meetings, one that will no doubt serve as an obstacle once their feelings for one another become genuine.

Whilst Cox is smart enough to deal with this in as light and pacy a manner as he can muster, it still can’t quite disguise the fact that his film is as contrived as any mainstream effort. Latter Days is exactly the kind of work which needs to be unassuming in order to get by, yet there’s the feeling that its writer-director is simply too knowing. Moreover, he doesn’t quite have the skill to cover this up and so the component parts reveal themselves throughout; despite its colourful language, male nudity and unashamedly gay lead character, this is still a thoroughly populist work. It’s governed by obvious devices (the music montage to demonstrate characters’ feelings clearly being a favourite of Cox’s), it’s facile when it should be rigid (the Mormon aspect is handled in a sweepingly two-dimensional manner despite this being a heavily autobiographical effort), and it’s ultimately so predictable that we’re never left in any doubt as to where it may be heading.

The Disc

Another of TLA’s initial batches of UK releases (alongside Everyone and Edge of Seventeen), it too is let down by a shoddy NTSC-PAL transfer. What should have been a fine presentation with anamorphic enhancement, correct aspect ratio and spotless print is instead rendered over-saturated, soft and often unsightly. It’s a shame as the film will clearly appeal to some even if left me cold. As for the soundtrack here we find a simple DD2.0 offering which may very well be Latter Days’ original mix. There’s no indication on the closing credits that it should come with 5.1 or DTS accompaniment and it certainly offers no problems. Indeed, the dialogue is audible throughout and the musical accompaniment pleasingly crisp. Moreover, there are no technical difficulties to speak of.

Pleasingly, the disc also comes with a healthy collection of extras even if they’re not all of the utmost quality. Cox teams up with his two leads, Sandvoss and Wes Ramsay, for a commentary track, though sadly the trio have little to say. Their discussion is punctuated by long pauses and the amount of information could easily have been gleaned into a punchier featurette of 15 minutes or so. In fact, one such featurette, entitled ‘Behind Latter Days’, makes an appearance on the disc meaning that this is the one to go for. Speaking to the majority of key players, it’s most notable elements are those in which Cox discusses his own past and the film’s autobiographical nature.

Elsewhere the disc offers up a short film of Cox’s, Reason Thirteen, which was later reconfigured into Latter Days’s pre-credit sequence (and note that it’s presentation isn’t great: 2.35:1 but non-anamorphic, really quite appalling sound, and once again NTSC-PAL); a trio of music videos for the Cox-written, Rebekah Jordan-performed songs which appear in the film; two deleted scenes with contextualising text explaining their absence from the final cut; and the standard photo gallery and batch of TLA trailers.

Note that all special features come – unlike the film itself - without optional English subtitles.

Cover of the German 2-disc version.-->

Region: 2
DVD Released: Out Now
DVD Country: United Kingdom
Running Time: 103 minutes
Screen Format: 1.77:1 Anamorphic PAL
Discs / Sides / Layers:
1 / 1 / Dual

Soundtracks: English DD2.0
Subtitles: English

Special Features:
# Commentary by Writer/Director C. Jay Cox and Actors Wes Ramsay and Steven Sandvoss
# 'Behind Latter Days' Featurette (20 mins)
# Reason Thirteen Short Film
# Two Deleted Scenes
# Three Music Videos by Rebekah Jordan
# Photo Gallery
# The Trevor Project PSA
# Theatrical Trailer
# Trailers for Cowboys & Angels, Everyone, Edge of Seventeen and Bear Cub

DVD Distributor:
TLA Releasing

Ratings:
Film 5 / 10
Video 5 / 10
Audio 8 / 10
Extras 6 / 10
Overall 5 / 10




[by roadi (dvdtimes.co.uk) ] [0 comments]

You have to be logged in to comment. 
 

LOGIN

User:    

Pass:    

   

Login Problems?
Signup (Member)

COMMUNITY

  [GER] Board
  [ENG] Board
  [ESP] Board
  Add News
  News Archive

  Imprint

AD


  
Buffy the Vampire Slayer, its characters, and the Buffy logo are the property of Joss Whedon, Mutant Enemy, the WB Television Network, and Twentieth Century Fox. Angel-The Series, its characters, and the Buffy logo are the property of Joss Whedon, Mutant Enemy, the WB Television Network, and Twentieth Century Fox.Other Series, their characters and logos are property of the proper right owners.
(c)Slayerverse 2006 [Imprint]