The Perfect Son

The Perfect Son is a Canadian drama film, written and directed by Leonard Farlinger and released in 2000.[1] The film centres on Ryan (Colm Feore) and Theo (David Cubitt) Taylor, estranged brothers reunited by their father's death. Growing up, Ryan was the "perfect son" and Theo was the "black sheep" who struggled with drug addiction. When Ryan reveals that he is dying of AIDS, however, the brothers attempt to repair their relationship while Theo simultaneously tries to win back his ex-girlfriend Sarah (Chandra West).[2]

The Perfect Son
Directed byLeonard Farlinger
Produced byJennifer Jonas
Written byLeonard Farlinger
StarringColm Feore
David Cubitt
Chandra West
Music byRon Sures
CinematographyBarry Stone
Edited byGlenn Berman
Production
company
New Real Films
Distributed byEquinox Entertainment
Release date
  • September 14, 2000 (2000-09-14) (TIFF)
Running time
92 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

The film premiered in the Perspectives Canada stream at the 2000 Toronto International Film Festival.[3]

Production

Farlinger wrote the script based on his own relationship with his older brother Brian Farlinger, who died of AIDS in 1995.[1] He stated that he chose to cast Feore and Cubitt in part because their significantly different performance styles as actors helped to illuminate the film's themes of familial conflict.[4]

The film was shot in Toronto in 1999, as the first film produced by Jennifer Jonas's New Real Films.[4]

Critical response

Peter Howell of the Toronto Star wrote that the movie was weak, but salvaged by Feore's and Cubitt's performances,[5] while Katrina Onstad of the National Post called the film frustratingly slow-moving, but wrote that "just when I'd given up on this film -- I felt drowsy -- the final act of The Perfect Son kicked in, honest and emotional (a woman I was sitting near full- body sobbed)."[6]

Marke Andrews of the Vancouver Sun reviewed the film more favourably, writing that although the film was not without problems, Farlinger and the lead actors had successfully rescued it from turning into the dreadful TV movie that a film with this premise could have become.[7]

Awards and nominations

Both Feore and Cubitt received Genie Award nominations for Best Actor at the 21st Genie Awards,[8] although neither won.

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References

  1. Stephen Cole, "O brother, how art thou?". National Post, February 2, 2001.
  2. John Griffin, "A crisis in need of drama: Gay-themed family story doesn't get its hands dirty enough". Montreal Gazette, February 2, 2001.
  3. Geoff Pevere, "Canadian reflections ; Perspective Canada sparks search for meaningful metaphors of national identity". Toronto Star, September 8, 2000.
  4. Pam Swedko, "On set: The Perfect Son". Playback, August 23, 1999.
  5. Peter Howell, "Poignant acting saves Perfect Son". Toronto Star, February 2, 2001.
  6. Katrina Onstad, "From zero to emotional in 93 minutes". National Post, September 13, 2000.
  7. Marke Andrews, "An imperfect but worthwhile drama: First-time effort by director Leonard Farlinger a compelling look at how families cope with death". Vancouver Sun, February 2, 2001.
  8. John McKay, "Maelstrom up for 10 Genies". Waterloo Region Record, December 13, 2000.
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