WillSushyMedia
This movie was so-so. It had it's moments, but wasn't the greatest.
Nayan Gough
A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.
Deanna
There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.
Fleur
Actress is magnificent and exudes a hypnotic screen presence in this affecting drama.
Horst in Translation ([email protected])
"Go Go Reject" is a 20-minute live action short film from 2010, so not a very new movie anymore, but still from the 2010s. The director is Michael J. Saul and the script is by Heath Daniels, who also plays the main character. For these two as well as many others working on this project I am sure this is still among their most known works today. This one here is about a a young man who loves Flashdance and dreams of being a dancer himself, but keeps getting rejected because he is too skinny. I guess his random gay romance story was included to advertise this as a gay movie because this phrase seems to make a film more popular these days. However, this is really not what the film is all about as it is all about the audition story I mentioned previously. The question I kept asking myself is why he simply won't audition anywhere else, but I guess the end brings the solution to that question too. I read other reviewers saying that the film succeeds thanks to the likable main character, but I did not find him likable at all. He is an over-the-top drama queen who honestly is not even that good of a dancer. It was impossible for me to cheer for him and hope he can make it. But of course we get the unrealistic happy ending. I say this was a mess. Watch something else instead.
Attila Kállai
This film was done brilliantly, it was not over bearing with the comedy. It had subtle kick-backs(beyond Jennifer Beals obvious) to other dance films, with making them obvious-and placed in at just the right moments. The actors delivered these references without pushing them, so if you got it-it was hilarious, if not, then not.This is a total two thumbs up, one of the best LBGT films I've ever seen; it kept me smiling and wanting more.The characters were so funny and well timed, that I found myself researching all of the actors. And speaking of the actors-going hand in hand with editing and directing by Michael J. Saul-the pacing was basically seem-less. Usually there is not enough time put into a scenes to develop it, to give an emotional transition from scenes, there's no set up-WELL HERE THERE WAS. When the pacing changed, it wasn't abrupt, instead it fit in with the feel of the film, and kept pushing you to see more. And the slight moments are over-the-top comedy was just enough; as we all get lost in our imagination from time to time. Wanting to be that star that we've all seen in the films we watch, this made it happen.
preppy-3
Gay short I saw at the Provincetown film festival. Nerdy gay guy Daniel (producer writer and actor Heath Daniels) watches hunky guys dancing at a gay bar. He LOVES dancing (and is quite good at it) but he's not hunky or hot enough to get a job at the bar. He meets hunky Cesar (drop dead gorgeous Korken Alexander) who agrees to help him pump up and dance in the bar. Daniel is encouraged by his best friend Matthew (Matthew Bridges).It's quick-moving, friendly and just begging to be liked--but that's the problem. It tries so hard to make you like it that it gets annoying. The acting occasionally becomes too frantic and the story rambles all over the place. Still, I find it hard to hate this film. It was obviously a labor of love for Daniels and all the acting is great. So it isn't good but it's totally inoffensive and just begs to be liked. I give it a 5.
eslgr8
Go Go Reject is a 20-minute gem of a short gay film. Producer/writer/star Heath Daniels is Daniel, an adorable would-be go-go boy rejected by club owner after club owner for being "too skinny" and "too white." A 21st Century gay male Doris Day/Jennifer Beals, Daniel vows to make his Flashdance dream come true. On the way, he meets his own Rock Hudson (smoldering Korken Alexander), all the while aided and abetted by true-blue best friend Matthew (nerdishly handsome Matthew Bridges). Michael Estime, Iva Turner, and Drew Droege shine in supporting roles, with plenty of scantily clothed hotties to provide eye candy on the way. Daniels has such boy-next- door charm, charisma, and pluck that you not only want him to succeed, you will totally buy it if and when he does. Michael J. Saul gets thumbs up for directing this entirely winning short that goes by so lickety split, you'll wish there were another twenty minutes to go at its final fadeout.