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Los Cinematógrafos del Arte Independiente y Cultura Comercial Celebra la Diversidad de la Comunidad Gay Mundial


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"L.I.E." raises the bar on the coming-of-age story with a tightly focused portrait of a 15-year-old who in his search for a father figure finds his kindly neighborhood sexual predator.
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A school counselor — up to now the only adult who's noticed what's going on in Howie's confused life — is trying with little success to get through to him, to show she understands.

"You're not a nerd," she says, "you're not a jock, you're not a brain, you're not a stoner . . . "

"I'm not a gangsta!" the 15-year-old offers, not taking this conversation very seriously. "So what am I?"

"You are a Howie Blitzer," she says.

"Great!" he answers with sarcastic enthusiasm. "My own category!"

Truly, Howie is in his own category among movie characters — he's the hero of "L.I.E." a coming-of-age story without a coming of age. The movie doesn't force the 15-year-old to achieve some revelation that will resolve his troubles and set him on the right path toward adulthood; it focuses on just a few days in which he learns to see a few feet further through his own personal fog.

Into this mix arrives Big John Harrigan, a burly middle-aged Irishman and decorated Vietnam vet who, in the logic of suburban America, is considered a pillar of the community while almost openly preying on vulnerable young boys like Howie. The "BJ" on his license plate doesn't just stand for "Big John."

John, desperate to introduce young Howie to the mysteries of the flesh, also happens to be the one guy in the picture who can introduce him to adulthood and the one person whom the teen doesn't reflexively push away. John goes all out to romance the youngster and impress him with the grown-up lifestyle, but he also feels genuinely fatherly as he starts to see the turmoil at Howie's core.

Whether "L.I.E." is pushing us to reconsider man-boy relationships is not certain, but it does offer us quite complex characters who — like all of us, especially at adolescence — are grappling with their identities and with the good and bad in their natures. Outwardly, Howie is often a punching bag for others who puts up a prickly front to protect himself and joins in petty crimes to attract friends; inwardly, he's a thoughtful, poetic and wounded soul who's still coming to terms with the loss of his mother and trying to figure out how to make real human connections.

"L.I.E." features spectacular and yet never overacted performances from Paul Franklin Dano as Howie, Brian Cox as Big John and Billy Kay as Gary. It's a story that subtly weaves together themes of adolescence, loss, parent-child relationships, gay awareness and suburban culture. It shows a young life in tight focus, and it works because it doesn't try to answer all of its questions outright, just show a few short days that give us the clues to understand the characters' past and future. ~ Joshua Tanzer
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Film Information: 'L.I.E.'

Web: Additional Cast, Details and Bios at IMDb
Director: Michael Cuesta
Writers: Stephen M. Ryder (writer) & Michael Cuesta (writer)
Cast: Full Cast and Crew
Genre: Drama
Awards: 20 wins and 15 nominations
Runtime: 97 minutes

Spoken Language: English
Subtitles: None
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Film Clip: 'L.I.E.''



Download & Extract Film Files: 'L.I.E.'.

Method 1.) File Self Extraction. (for PC) Download the files into the same
folder. File 1 has an 'exe' extension. After download is complete click on
the '.part01.exe' file & the film will self extract into the same folder.
(for Mac) You will need a Command Line Archiver like rar for Mac OS X'
L.I.E.part01.exeL.I.E.part02.rar
L.I.E.part03.rarL.I.E.part04.rar
L.I.E.part05.rarL.I.E.part06.rar
L.I.E.part07.rarL.I.E.part08.rar
Method 2.) Download files & rejoin with a program like HJ Split/Join
(for PC) and either MacHacha or Split and Concat (for Mac).
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