Director: Jonah Markowitz
Actors: Brad Rowe, Tina Holmes, Mat Bushell, Trevor Wright, Ross Thomas
On the recommendation of a friend who had caught it at Outfest, we saw
the film Shelter this evening. What a beautiful film! To call it a
coming-out story or a "gay surfer film", while true, would vastly
oversimplify this film, which deals as much with the conflict of a
young man trading dreams of art school against the obligations of
supporting his struggling family. The protagonist, Zach, loves to surf,
and surfing plays a big role in the film, but as one blogger said, to
say that Shelter is about surfing is like saying that Brokeback
Mountain was about animal husbandry. Like Brokeback Mountain, this
coming out story is also set in a very atypical and unexpected context
for a gay story (in this case, the California surfing subculture) and
with characters whose situations make being gay especially difficult.
Zach is the only son in a working-class family, with a disabled father,
a deceased mother, an irresponsible sister, and her five-year-old son,
for whom Zach is his only father figure. When Zach discovers an
unexpected romance with the older brother of his best friend and surfer
buddy, it threatens to be a life-shattering conflict. What is wonderful
about this particular story is that it is not just a unidimensional
conflict about acceptance or rejection of being gay. It is also about
Zach pursuing his dreams of going to art school, and fulfilling his
sense of obligation to his family to support his young nephew (both
emotionally and financially). It is not a simplistic narrative of being
true to himself by embracing his "gay self". For Zach, being true to
himself includes his family values and his artistic aspirations, as
well as his newly discovered romance, and so embracing his "true self"
doesn't pull him in just one clear direction. Seeing how he resolves
this makes a very satisfying story.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0942384/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shelter_(2007_film)