Tiger Orange: Difference between revisions

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| starring = Mark Strano<br>[[Johnny Hazzard|Frankie Valenti]]
| starring = Mark Strano<br>[[Johnny Hazzard|Frankie Valenti]]
| music =
| music =
| cinematography =
| cinematography = Lila Javan
| editing =
| editing =
| distributor =
| studio = Picture Stable
| distributor = [[Wolfe Video]]
| released = {{Film date|2014|7|18|[[Outfest]]|df=yes}}
| released = {{Film date|2014|7|18|[[Outfest]]|df=yes}}
| runtime = 76 minutes
| runtime = 76 minutes
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Chet, shy and reserved, has been living relatively [[closeted]] in the small town where the brothers grew up, running their father's hardware store and taking great care not to be too open about his sexuality in the town's relatively conservative social order, while Todd, more upfront about his sexuality, left home at 18 to move to [[Los Angeles]], where he has been struggling to build a career as an actor.<ref>[http://variety.com/2014/film/festivals/film-review-tiger-orange-1201274531/ "Film Review: ‘Tiger Orange’"]. ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'', August 5, 2014.</ref> Despite the clash of personalities, however, each also envies some aspects of the other's life; Chet envies Todd's freedom to live his life openly, while Todd regrets not having experienced Chet's sense of belonging to a close-knit community and the opportunity he had to remain in close contact with their father.<ref name=thr/> The tensions between them reach their peak when Brandon (Gregory Marcel), Chet's high school crush, also returns home to take care of his ailing mother; Chet continues to struggle with his feelings for Brandon, while Todd actively pursues him.<ref name=thr/>
Chet, shy and reserved, has been living relatively [[closeted]] in the small town where the brothers grew up, running their father's hardware store and taking great care not to be too open about his sexuality in the town's relatively conservative social order, while Todd, more upfront about his sexuality, left home at 18 to move to [[Los Angeles]], where he has been struggling to build a career as an actor.<ref>[http://variety.com/2014/film/festivals/film-review-tiger-orange-1201274531/ "Film Review: ‘Tiger Orange’"]. ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'', August 5, 2014.</ref> Despite the clash of personalities, however, each also envies some aspects of the other's life; Chet envies Todd's freedom to live his life openly, while Todd regrets not having experienced Chet's sense of belonging to a close-knit community and the opportunity he had to remain in close contact with their father.<ref name=thr/> The tensions between them reach their peak when Brandon (Gregory Marcel), Chet's high school crush, also returns home to take care of his ailing mother; Chet continues to struggle with his feelings for Brandon, while Todd actively pursues him.<ref name=thr/>


The film premiered on July 18, 2014 at [[Outfest]].<ref name=thr/> Strano won the festival's award for Best Actor in a Feature Film.<ref name=bent>[http://blogs.indiewire.com/bent/tiger-orange-director-wade-gasque-on-capturing-a-new-lgbt-narrative-20150707 "'Tiger Orange' Director Wade Gasque On Capturing a New LGBT Narrative"]. ''[[Indiewire]]'', July 7, 2015.</ref>
The film premiered on July 18, 2014 at [[Outfest]].<ref name=thr/> Strano won the festival's award for Best Actor in a Feature Film.<ref>[http://www.out.com/entertainment/popnography/2014/07/20/gaby-hoffmann-tiger-orange-greg-louganis-doc-win-outfest "Gaby Hoffmann, Greg Louganis Doc, Tiger Orange Win at Outfest"]. ''[[Out (magazine)|Out]]'', July 20, 2014.</ref>


In a 2015 post for ''[[Indiewire]]'''s /Bent blog on LGBT film, Gasque described the film as having been inspired by the LGBT community's "subtle tug-of-war between our desire to stand out and our need to fit in."<ref name=bent/>
In a 2015 post for ''[[Indiewire]]'''s /Bent blog on LGBT film, Gasque described the film as having been inspired by the LGBT community's "subtle tug-of-war between our desire to stand out and our need to fit in."<ref name=bent>[http://blogs.indiewire.com/bent/tiger-orange-director-wade-gasque-on-capturing-a-new-lgbt-narrative-20150707 "'Tiger Orange' Director Wade Gasque On Capturing a New LGBT Narrative"]. ''[[Indiewire]]'', July 7, 2015.</ref>


The film was picked up by [[Wolfe Video]] for distribution on DVD, video on demand and digital media platforms in January 2015.<ref>[http://www.indiewire.com/article/wolfe-releasing-acquires-worldwide-rights-to-boy-meets-girl-and-tiger-orange-20150114 "Wolfe Releasing Acquires Worldwide Rights to 'Boy Meets Girl' and 'Tiger Orange'"]. ''[[Indiewire]]'', January 14, 2015.</ref> It was released to those platforms in July 2015.
The film was picked up by [[Wolfe Video]] for distribution on DVD, video on demand and digital media platforms in January 2015.<ref>[http://www.indiewire.com/article/wolfe-releasing-acquires-worldwide-rights-to-boy-meets-girl-and-tiger-orange-20150114 "Wolfe Releasing Acquires Worldwide Rights to 'Boy Meets Girl' and 'Tiger Orange'"]. ''[[Indiewire]]'', January 14, 2015.</ref> It was released to those platforms in July 2015.

Revision as of 16:30, 14 July 2015

Tiger Orange
Directed byWade Gasque
Written byMark Strano
StarringMark Strano
Frankie Valenti
CinematographyLila Javan
Production
company
Picture Stable
Distributed byWolfe Video
Release date
  • 18 July 2014 (2014-07-18) (Outfest)
Running time
76 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Tiger Orange is an American drama film, released in 2014.[1] Directed by Wade Gasque and written by Mark Strano, the film stars Strano and Frankie Valenti as Chet and Todd, two gay brothers struggling to reconnect after their father's death.[1]

Chet, shy and reserved, has been living relatively closeted in the small town where the brothers grew up, running their father's hardware store and taking great care not to be too open about his sexuality in the town's relatively conservative social order, while Todd, more upfront about his sexuality, left home at 18 to move to Los Angeles, where he has been struggling to build a career as an actor.[2] Despite the clash of personalities, however, each also envies some aspects of the other's life; Chet envies Todd's freedom to live his life openly, while Todd regrets not having experienced Chet's sense of belonging to a close-knit community and the opportunity he had to remain in close contact with their father.[1] The tensions between them reach their peak when Brandon (Gregory Marcel), Chet's high school crush, also returns home to take care of his ailing mother; Chet continues to struggle with his feelings for Brandon, while Todd actively pursues him.[1]

The film premiered on July 18, 2014 at Outfest.[1] Strano won the festival's award for Best Actor in a Feature Film.[3]

In a 2015 post for Indiewire's /Bent blog on LGBT film, Gasque described the film as having been inspired by the LGBT community's "subtle tug-of-war between our desire to stand out and our need to fit in."[4]

The film was picked up by Wolfe Video for distribution on DVD, video on demand and digital media platforms in January 2015.[5] It was released to those platforms in July 2015.

References

External links