Review by Scott Cranin
By: Scott Cranin
In-House Review - Jul 19 2013
Out of all the gay men in Los Angeles (and sadly, he's tested out more than a few), Glenn (played by Matthew Montgomery) has finally found his soul mate - a cute Southern boy named Adam (Windham Beacham). Their relationship started, as so many great ...
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Out of all the gay men in Los Angeles (and sadly, he's tested out more than a few), Glenn (played by Matthew Montgomery) has finally found his soul mate - a cute Southern boy named Adam (Windham Beacham). Their relationship started, as so many great relationships have, with the personal ads ("GWM seeks LTR"). From the moment they met, it was instant attraction. Now Glenn's in love for the first time, and it feels great.
There's only one problem. Well, actually a few problems. But are they big enough to be deal-breakers, or can Glenn and Adam work through their differences?
Glenn's straight friends encourage him to stick it out and make it work - after all, everyone's happier as part of a couple, right? Meanwhile, his gay friends tell him to move on and find someone they can all like.
Ultimately, only Glenn and Adam can decide what it takes to sustain a long-term relationship.
Review by MajBill3
By: MajBill3
The subject and title of the film "Long-Term Relationship" is a very enjoyable film and certainly has its share of controversy played out by the actors portraying its characters. The leading actors did an excellent job under the able direction of Rob...
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The subject and title of the film "Long-Term Relationship" is a very enjoyable film and certainly has its share of controversy played out by the actors portraying its characters. The leading actors did an excellent job under the able direction of Rob Williams. Windham Beacham did a top notch and believable job in the role of Adam, especially in conveying the emotional content. I was hoping for an interview of Beacham in the added content after the film. I was anxious to hear what his reactions were in his role-playing and the context of the film. However, he was not one of the interviewees.
Perhaps the cliche "But he's a Republican," was a bit overdone.
Review by Lacelot
By: Lacelot
Long-term Relationship is a movie you will want Matthew Montgomery this is far his best movie yet.
I was glue to my seat filled with good hummer and some sad. But it really hit on some things that truely happen in relationship today.
AL...
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Long-term Relationship is a movie you will want Matthew Montgomery this is far his best movie yet.
I was glue to my seat filled with good hummer and some sad. But it really hit on some things that truely happen in relationship today.
ALL NEED TO SEE THIS MOVIE..
Review by Amos Lassen
By: Amos Lassen
"LONG-TERM RELATIONSHIP"
the review
Amos Lassen
Made by Guest House films and written, produced and directed by first timer Rob Williams, "Long-Term Relationship" is a romantic comedy which is full of laughs and gorgeous men. It also ...
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"LONG-TERM RELATIONSHIP"
the review
Amos Lassen
Made by Guest House films and written, produced and directed by first timer Rob Williams, "Long-Term Relationship" is a romantic comedy which is full of laughs and gorgeous men. It also deals with politics and sexual incompatibility and friends.
Glenn (Matthew Montgomery) sees a personal ad for another gay white male looking for a LTR and answers it. By doing so he meets Adam (Windham Beacham) and they are both mutually attracted. From the first meeting, they both felt they had rediscovered the Garden of Eden. Everything seemed perfect...except...that Adam is a Republican and that they just do not mesh sexually. In fact, Glenn, a dedicated and ardent Democrat is even willing to overlook Adam's affiliation with the Republican party but...the sex is bad ---really, really bad...lousy. The two get along wonderfully except of in bed and neither can figure out what the problem is.
Disillusioned, Glenn tries to stick out and s encouraged by his friends to do so. We all know that everyone loves a couple and everyone loves Glenn and Adam. At least everyone loves Glenn and Adam except for Vincent, Glenn's roommate who has a personal agenda to keep them apart. Will love rule out? Will Adam and Glenn find true happiness and sexual bliss? Will Vincent succeed in destroying the couple? These ate the earth shaking questions that we have to answer. It is only Glenn and Adam who can make the decision as to whether or not the dating fling can become a LTR as they face the issues that all couples-gay and straight face.
"LTR" is both an intelligent film and a comedy that will keep you laughing, long after it is over. Dealing with the issues of being in a relationship, "LTR" manages to provide a good look into what makes a relationship work in an extremely humorous way and avoids the clichés we so often find in movies with gay themes. Notably absent from the movie are the stereotypical (well almost absent) caricatures we see so much of in film. This is the story of dating which is wonderfully acted, literately scripted and directed with élan.
The great musical soundtrack features original songs and exciting background music written by Ben Holbrook. All in all "LTR" is a great package deal, good actors, good script, good direction, good music. Who could ask for more?
Let me just add that "LTR" won the Jury Prize as best feature film at the Outflix festival in Memphis in August and was nominated for the Alternative Spirit Award at the 10th Annual Rhode Island International Film Festival and was the opening night feature at the OUTAKES Film Festival in Dallas in October of this year.
Review by KAC
By: KAC
A film that will be of long-term interest
Although Long-Term Relationship is billed as a romantic comedy, it seems to me to be better described as a light-hearted romantic drama. Some of its comedy falters, and some scenes in the movie ar...
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A film that will be of long-term interest
Although Long-Term Relationship is billed as a romantic comedy, it seems to me to be better described as a light-hearted romantic drama. Some of its comedy falters, and some scenes in the movie are so serious and sullen, and some characters in the movie express such bitterness or sadness, that the comedic effect of the film is significantly diluted. Writer/producer Rob Williams should have decided early on whether to make the film a true comedy or a real drama interspersed with some comedy. I think the halfway nature of this film lessens its overall impact. Nevertheless, I did end up enjoying the movie for the humor present in its better scenes, its take on the progression of, and the perils involved in, a long-term gay relationship, and, yes, admittedly, its nudity. Indeed, the movie will be a special delight for fans of Matthew Montgomery (and who isn't?) who have always longed to see more of his body exposed in a film. The movie seems to represent in many respects a celebration of Montgomery's beautiful male physique. From the opening striptease to the closing bedroom scene, Montgomery's character is in and out of his clothes numerous times throughout the movie. There are even some brief frontal scenes. This, perhaps, doesn't always contribute to the artistic merits of the film, but it does make watching the movie a heart-pounding experience.
The movie's dominant storyline is very simple. Glenn, played by Montgomery, decides to respond to a personals ad placed by Adam, played by Windham Beacham, who is seeking another for a committed relationship. The two meet and discover that they share many things in common. As their relationship develops, though, differences between the two emerge and cause problems for the relationship. The two very nearly split up, but, in the end, Glenn figures out the source of their difficulties and fully commits himself to Adam. Glenn is clearly the main character in this movie, and the story unfolds primarily from his perspective. Just why Glenn chooses to abandon his promiscuous single lifestyle, which has been so much a part of who he is, is never explained, although there is a hint in the movie that what prompts Glenn is his feeling that he is getting old (which is hardly believable). Also baffling is why Glenn stays in the relationship, despite the serious troubles, and exactly how he comes to his conclusion about what the problem is. Furthermore, I could never figure out completely what was the relationship between Glenn and his roommate, Vincent. The two once were, but are no longer, a couple, in spite of the fact that they are still living together and, surprisingly, still have amorous feelings for each other. Vincent becomes extremely resentful of Glenn's relationship with Adam as it develops and initially tries to derail it but then, near the end of the movie, suddenly changes face and encourages Glenn not to let Adam go. Of course, people doing strange things that we cannot always account for is undoubtedly acceptable in a comedy when it contributes to the humor, but in this case it does not. There are, in addition, several subordinate storylines that run parallel to the main storyline but, unfortunately, never quite intersect it. Among Glenn's friends is a married couple who are disappointed in that they haven't yet had a child, and Glenn is made very happy when the wife tells him that she is finally pregnant. Another friend of Glenn has trouble keeping a steady job. Just why these things are happening we don't know, and, moreover, how precisely they fit into the overall story is unclear. These subplots involving Glenn's friends appear overall to be extraneous diversions from the main storyline and seem to go nowhere in terms of clearly advancing or enhancing the main plot.
Long-Term Relationship is a movie that is carried along in large measure by the acting abilities of Montgomery and Beacham, although some scenes involving people playing Glenn's friends are effective if only for their drama and not their humor. However, much of the dialogue in the conversations among Glenn's friends appears too rehearsed and contrived to sound natural, and some scenes involving only the characters appear fake. There is one scene, for instance, where two characters are supposed to be gardening; it is quite obvious that they are not really gardening but are only pretending to be gardening. Indeed, several of the people who portray Glenn's friends seem to be acting at times as if they are on stage instead of on film. The level of pretense apparent in some of these extraneous scenes could be accepted on stage, but not in a movie. I suspect that the intent of these lesser scenes was to provide for some Seinfeld-like humor, but, unfortunately, for the most part it doesn't work. The comedy that does work is provided mainly by the interaction between Glenn and Adam and the interaction between the two and Adam's parents. It is too bad that the film did not focus more attention on these interactions and the humor resulting from them. I would like to have seen the ups and downs of Glenn and Adam's blossoming and faltering relationship developed more fully in the movie. In the process, the film could have poked fun at more of the myths surrounding gay relationships, myths that are often accepted as fact by both gay and straight people. For instance, is it really true that those in a gay relationship celebrate their anniversary every month and a golden anniversary after five years?
The quality of the picture and sound on DVD is superb, although the background music is not something I noticed very much until the closing scenes of the movie. The DVD has special features that include audio commentary and alternative endings. Long-Term Relationship is a quaint film that will be of some interest for some time to come, but I don't believe that it will emerge as a classic.
-KAC
Review by gengidash
By: gengidash
This was a great movie. Given so many indie gay movies put the OFF in AWFUL, this one had great lead actors and a good storyline. Hated the best friend character; he was a jerk and he got on my nerves, but he was balanced by the femmy character, wh...
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This was a great movie. Given so many indie gay movies put the OFF in AWFUL, this one had great lead actors and a good storyline. Hated the best friend character; he was a jerk and he got on my nerves, but he was balanced by the femmy character, who got funnier as the movie went on.
Best friend: I don't want you to turn into me.
FC: Oh honey, nobody wants that.
Just an excellent movie. I highly recommend it.
Review by Conner
By: Conner
Being a "BIG" Matthew Montgomery fan. I bought this movie, and like any other movie he has been in, it was "GREAT"!!
I loved how it ended, and I won't give the ending away. All I will say is, either rent it, or purchase the movie. You won'...
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Being a "BIG" Matthew Montgomery fan. I bought this movie, and like any other movie he has been in, it was "GREAT"!!
I loved how it ended, and I won't give the ending away. All I will say is, either rent it, or purchase the movie. You won't be sorry, if you do.
I rate this flick "4 - STARS" Than again, I'll throw in an extra star, that's "5 STARS"!!!
Review by Janorm
By: Janorm
This is the most definitive love story of gay life to come out. This film has all the ethos, angst, and pathos necessary for a superb story line. Truly, an enjoyable picture to see with the one you love!!
Review by Peterp88
By: Peterp88
I purchased this title to see Matthew Montgomery again. I adored him in 'Gone, But Not Forgotten'. We get to see his beautiful body in the nude and not clouded in red light. Windham Beacham is beautiful. Too bad we see him only from the waist up. St...
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I purchased this title to see Matthew Montgomery again. I adored him in 'Gone, But Not Forgotten'. We get to see his beautiful body in the nude and not clouded in red light. Windham Beacham is beautiful. Too bad we see him only from the waist up. Still beautiful! I found the story line very believable and empathised with the lead characters. I will not present spoilers with the exception that it had a happy ending as in 'Latter Days.' Buy it. You will like it.
Review by Derek
By: Derek
I rented three movies yesterday - Father Knows, the Sex Movie, and Long Term Relationship - all gay-themed flicks. I watched them in that order. I was thoroughly disgusted with the first, mildly disappointed with the second, and pleasantly pleased k...
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I rented three movies yesterday - Father Knows, the Sex Movie, and Long Term Relationship - all gay-themed flicks. I watched them in that order. I was thoroughly disgusted with the first, mildly disappointed with the second, and pleasantly pleased knowing I saved the best movie for last. LTR was a wonderful movie - simply put.Matt Montgomery is perfect as Glen (a LA gay man tired of the gay scene hoping to find someone different in the personals). Windham Beacham plays Adam who does nor reveal his secret in his ad, but hopes Glen accepts him anyway. Unlike the other reviewer, I found both men quite attractive - they both make the movie much more believable by not having the too perfect bodies and too chiseled features.All I suggest to Windham is to work on those shoulders!The supporting cast is great, and they come up with the best lines. I found the humor to be fresh and original, and when you think the punch line would go one way, it went another -It made it not as predictable as one might think....And there is some frontal nudity too!I haven't bought any DVD releases the past year - until now.
Review by Fuzzyprogrammer
By: Fuzzyprogrammer
FINALLY a movie with an ending I like! I think it's one of the better ones out there. Don't rent--buy it and show your support for this DVD!
Review by Luis
By: Luis
The first time I saw Matthew Montgomery in a film was 2003's Gone But Not Forgotten - which I despised both for the movie itself and his acting, so I was a little perturbed when I learned he was the lead of Long-Term Relationship. I was still left sl...
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The first time I saw Matthew Montgomery in a film was 2003's Gone But Not Forgotten - which I despised both for the movie itself and his acting, so I was a little perturbed when I learned he was the lead of Long-Term Relationship. I was still left slightly unimpressed by him this time around, but he is improving. Newcomer Windham Beacham is fantastic, as are Mr. O'Daly, Mr. Lucas and Ms. Tiu. I think Long-Term Relationships succeeds in washing the bad taste of recent gay rom-com's like Coffee Date and Adam & Steve out of one's mouth. Worth renting.
Review by Craig
By: Craig
Do ugly actors cost less to hire? That was my first question while watching this film. My second was can you sue someone for being emotionally broken enough to think this is romantic or sexy in any way? The third question that plagued me was if J...
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Do ugly actors cost less to hire? That was my first question while watching this film. My second was can you sue someone for being emotionally broken enough to think this is romantic or sexy in any way? The third question that plagued me was if Jesus would murder me to put me out of my misery?
Review by Big Fish
By: Big Fish
It's so nice to see a funny, smart, well directed, well acted film about two gay men. A smart story that is engaging, not to mention some good sexy parts!