8.2 /10 1 Votes
97% Rotten Tomatoes Screenplay Keith Hartman Producer Keith Hartman | 6.7/10 Director Keith Hartman Music director David Paul Dorn | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Initial release 25 September 2010 (Los Angeles) Cast Stewart Carrico, JoAnne McGee, Carol Goans, Steve Snyder, Ginger Pullman Similar Make the Yuletide Gay, The Notorious Daughter, Beats Being Dead, eCupid, 9 Lives |
You should meet my son trailer
You Should Meet My Son! is a 2011 gay-themed comedy film written and directed by Keith Hartman, about a conservative mother coming to terms with her son's homosexuality.
Contents
You should meet my son trailer legendado
Plot

A conservative widow, Mae Davis (Joanne McGee) and her spinster sister Rose (Carol Goans) are determined to find the perfect girl for Mae's son Brian (Stewart Carrico), until they accidentally discover that Brian is gay and had been in a relationship for the previous five years with Dennis, who they thought was just his roommate.

After coming to terms with her son's homosexuality and learning that Dennis left Brian for another man, Mae decides to find the perfect man for Brian. She and Rose explore online gay dating and visit a gay bar, where they befriend drag queens, leathermen and an art student, Chase (Steve Snyder) who works in the bar as a stripper.

They host a dinner, intending to introduce Brian and Chase, but Brian surprises them by arriving with Jennie Sue (Ginger Pullman), the daughter of a Christian preacher, and announcing that he is no longer gay and that he intends to marry her shortly. Mae is convinced that Brian is shying away from the possibility of love to avoid being hurt as he was by Dennis, but she decides not to let him trap himself into a loveless marriage.

Mae hosts another dinner, this time inviting her friends from the gay bar and the members of a local gay youth group as well as Jennie Sue's parents, to scare the last ones into breaking the engagement with Brian. The party quickly devolves into chaos, and ends with Brian admitting that he can't marry Jennie Sue since he's still gay, and Jennie Sue's parents revealing that she's a closeted lesbian and disowning her.
Mae and Rose take Jennie Sue to live in with them for the time being, and the movie ends with all characters celebrating Brian and Jennie Sue's newfound freedom, leaving open a possibility for Brian and Chase to get together.
Cast
Production
The film was shot in 18 days in diverse locations in Los Angeles.