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Outing Riley Movie Review

Outing Riley Review

"Outing Riley" Overview

***1/2 stars

Rating: NR
2004

Cast and Crew

Director : Pete Jones
Producer : Patrick Peach
Screenwiter : Pete Jones
Starring : Pete Jones,Nathan Fillion,Dev Kennedy,Michael McDonald,Julie R. Pearl,Stoney Westmoreland

You may recall HBO's movie-making contest/reality series Project Greenlight from a few years back. The first winning film was Stolen Summer, and its writer/director Pete Jones has followed up his victory with Outing Riley, a good-natured and better-than-average coming-out tale centered around a 30-ish gay Chicagoan who is surrounded by a large and boisterous Irish-American family.

Bobby Riley (Jones) is pretty much OK with who he is, telling us this directly as he narrates his own tale. When his father dies, he wonders if now is the time to tell his siblings he's gay. His sister Maggie (Julie R. Pearl) already knows and is tired of keeping his secret, but how will his three brothers -- pot-smoking Connor (Stoney Westmoreland), porn-addicted Luke (Nathan Fillion), and priest Father Jack (Dev Kennedy) -- react?

Bobby's boyfriend Andy (Michael McDonald) has been patient, but he too wonders what Bobby is waiting for. Time and time again Bobby comes close to making the revelation, but he worries that his macho, married, beer-drinking, Cubs-loving brothers may not take the news well. As for Jack the priest, the constant butt of altar-boy jokes hurled at him by his brothers, his strict adherence to Catholic dogma also presents a problem.

Unlike most coming-out sagas, this film isn't about Bobby's melodramatic torment. It's more about his embarrassment and the inconvenience of it all. He often turns to the camera and points out to us how silly this all is. Such a bother. At one point, we spot the furry tip of a boom microphone drop into the frame. Then it happens again. Oops, a filming error? No. Bobby sees it too, grabs it, pulls it down, then corrals the boom mike operator and asks him for his thoughts on love and life. The guy's stunned response: "Um, I’m not supposed to be talking here." It's a great moment.

Of course the beans must eventually be spilled, and Bobby's revelation sets off a chain reaction of other family revelations that ultimately help all the siblings grow closer. It's kind of like Secrets and Lies but without all the crying. As long as they have their senses of humor and their beers, the Riley family will be fine. A tip of the Cubs cap to Jones for approaching what is usually a lugubrious topic with wit and a light heart.







Norm!


Reviewer: Don Willmott


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