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Film

Film review: Love. Simon

A familiar genre movie - but ground-breaking at the same time

April 5, 2018 10:06
Nick Robinson in Love, Simon

ByAnne Joseph, Anne Joseph

1 min read

In many respects, Love, Simon is a familiar genre movie: an entertaining high-school teen rom-com packed with likeable characters negotiating their way in love and life. But what sets this gently humoured drama apart is that its protagonist, 17-year-old Simon (Nick Robinson), is a closeted gay boy.

“For the most part, I’m just like you,” says Simon in his opening voice-over. He is an affable, dependable teen who leads a normal life, surrounded by a close-knit group of friends and loving, supportive parents. He even admits to liking his younger sister but Simon has a “huge-ass secret” that he is gay. His reluctance at coming out is not because he fears being rejected by his friends and family but because he is concerned that it might change everything, that people will view him differently. And so, despite the pressure of keeping his sexuality under wraps, Simon opts to maintain a straight façade.

Directed by Greg Berlanti with a script written by Elizabeth Berger and Isaac Aptaker the pair behind the TV series, This is Us Love, Simon is based on a Young Adult debut novel, by Jewish author Becky Albertalli.

The film marks a significant shift in LGBTQ cinema in that it is the first Hollywood studio-made movie, aimed at a mainstream audience with a young, lead character whose gay identity is front and centre of the narrative.