Credits
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-
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You Might Also Like
- TV Review In the Gloaming | Ken Tucker
- Pop Culture News A NEW DIRECTION | Steve Daly
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- Movie News Batman and Superman team up | Cindy Pearlman
- All About Christopher Reeve
- Television News William Hurt joins FX's 'Damages'

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