Billy's Hollywood Screen Kiss
Rank
Middle 40-60% of all time (see others with this rank)
Festival Year
1998 (click here to see all competition films from this year)
Category
Dramatic Competition
Cast
Sean P. Hayes, Brad Rowe, Richard Ganoung, Meredith Scott Lynn, Matthew Ashford, Paul Bartel
Non-Cast Credits
Tommy O'Haver, David Moseley, Meredith Scott Lynn, Irene Turner, Mark Mervis, Jeff Betancourt, Franco Giacomo Carbone, Alan Ari Lazar
Description
Set against the romantic imagery of old Hollywood Tommy O'Haver's superbly crafted feature debut, Billy's Hollywood Screen Kiss, tells the story of a modern romance struggling to bloom into the Hollywood ideal. Billy Collier, a young photographer and movie buff, finds himself out of work and at the end of another dismal relationship. "Boy meets boy" in the form of Gabriel, a gorgeous young musician who works at the local coffeehouse. As luck will have it, combined with some serious prodding from his roommate Georgiana, aka George, Billy convinces Gabriel to model for his new project, a series of romantic film stills. In every Hollywood romance, there is one thing that stands between the leading man and happiness.
In this case, Billy must find the answer to that nagging question: Is Gabriel straight or gay? Beginning with one of the wildest sequences ever in independent film, O'Haver employs a range of interesting artistic choices, including Polaroid freezes, wonderful dream sequences, and eye-catching CinemaScope pho tography to establish he has a firm grasp on the art of filmmaking. The cast are mostly unknown, but they are thoroughly engaging and bring real presence to the screen with characters who are sweet but never cloying. If Billy is a film buff, O'Haver must be one, too, for his genuine love for film shines through. Billy's Hollywood Screen Kiss is a smart film by a filmmaker who knows cinematic tradition and enlists it adeptly to tell an unconventional love story.
Reviewer
John Cooper (see other films reviewed by the same reviewer)