OutFilms: Hundreds of gay,
lesbian, bisexual, and transgender
movie reviews

 
What's This?
There are more than 800 gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender movies from 44 countries reviewed on this site.
>>about this site
>>Site Map
top ten lists
genres
Type
Rating
year
adult films policy
If you're 18 or older, click here.

link to outfilms
Put a link to OutFilms on your site.




Rent this movie
Buy this movie
Watch the trailer

Judas Kiss 

Year: 1999
Country: USA
Director: J.T. Tepnapa
Starring: Charlie David, Sean Paul Lockhart, Richard Harmon, Timo Descamps, Julia Morizawa, Ron Boyd, Troy Fischnaller, Samantha Rund, Ronee Collins, Iain Dunn, Eric Helland, Stephanie Hillbert, Laura Kenny, Dale Bowers, Vince Valenzuela
Synopsis: A once-promising film director is handed a chance to change his future when he meets an earlier version of himself.
Quick review: There's a good movie in 'Judas Kiss' if you can only buy into the premise. That is a mighty big if. This is the story of a man being given a chance to change his past and fix the biggest mistake of his life. Zach Wells was considered an up-and-coming young director after his short film, 'Judas Kiss,' won the prestigious Keystone Award when he was only a freshman in college. But it all went downhill after that. Now 15 years later, no one knows his name and few remember him. A friend asks him to fill in for him judging the same film contest he once won. He returns to Keystone where he is picked up by a hot young man (Sean Paul Lockhart, better known to many gay men as the porn actor Brent Corrigan). Turns out that young man is Danny Reyes, the same name Zach Wells went by before he changed it to fit into Hollywood better. Zach soon believes someone is playing a joke on him, setting up this young man to pretend to be him. Here's my one problem with this film. I'm a fan of sci-fi and fantasy and don't mind a little supernatural thrown in. But if you're going to dive into those subjects, you have to make an attempt at explaining things. No such attempt is made here. We have one man sleeping with, talking to, etc. a 15-year earlier version of himself. What I also found odd, was that he didn't recognize him. I would suspect most 35-year-olds would recognize themselves from when they were 20. So how all this came about is a mystery. No attempt to explain if he traveled back in time, or into some parallel universe, or anything. But that's the only flaw. The rest of the film is quite engaging as Zach looks back on himself with many regrets and watches as Danny is eager to make the same mistakes.

 

Drama : Comedy : Romance : Suspense : Musical : Erotic
Gay Men Films : Lesbian Films : Bisexual Films : Transgender Films

Overall GLBT Films Top 10 : Gay Men Films Top 10 : Lesbian Films Top 10
Bisexual Films Top 10 : Transgender Films Top 10 : HIV/AIDS Films Top 10

Site Map : Contact the editor : Contact the IT Manager
Paying the bills