• --

Credits

With: Glenn Close

Christopher Reeve made his directorial debut with In the Gloaming, and given his condition, it's a rather inspirational achievement. There's no question that he works well with actors, and Glenn Close in particular gives a nuanced performance as a long-suffering mother. That said, the film is troubling in ways one doubts Reeve intended. The story of a gay son (Robert Sean Leonard) dying of AIDS who returns to his buttoned-up suburban family, the film is curiously buttoned up as well. The words AIDS and gay are never mentioned, and few scenes suggest Leonard feels any physical discomfort — yet the restraint seems more morbid than uplifting. Ultimately, this is a disease-of-the-week flick, a genre that seems more and more like emotional pornography. B-


Sign up for EW.com's The 25 newsletter!

Stay in the know and get EW.com's top 5 stories, 5 days a week (sent weekday afternoons).
 

Add Your Comments

The rules: Keep it clean, and stay on the subject or we might delete your comment. If you see inappropriate language, e-mail us. You must have javascript enabled to submit a comment.
--
Change/Edit your grade
characters remaining