- A successful young Los Angeles doctor and his equally successful television producer wife find their happily-ever-after life torn asunder when the husband suddenly confronts his long-repressed attraction for other men. Zach and Claire live a comfortable life, secure in their love for one another when Bart, a swinging Los Angeles novelist, walks into Zach's office for a medical check-up and awakens unfamiliar feelings in him. In a move which leaves him feeling wracked with guilt, Zach cancels dinner with Claire in order to go out on a dinner date with Bart. He is inexplicably drawn to this man, who seems intent on keeping him at arm's length. Why can Bart not allow their relationship to grow? he wonders. Exasperated, he asks Bart, "Do you snore? Does anybody ever get a chance to find out?" As Zach's absences become more and more frequent, Claire's concern manifests itself in the suspicion that he is having an affair with another woman. Finally jilted by Bart and feeling alone for the first time in his married life, Zach resolves to tell Claire the truth about himself. Predictably, Claire is shocked that she could have known so little about the man that she has loved for so many years and accuses him of deceiving her from the very start.—Mark Fleetwood <mfleetwo@mail.coin.missouri.edu>
- This film follows a young, idealistic married couple named Zach and Claire. They seem to be the perfect couple: college sweethearts with similar tastes and opinions; they are each very intelligent, sensitive and caring individuals who can be both fun-loving and serious in turn. Zach and Claire like one another as people as well as lovers. Each one of them is rising in his/her career and they talk about having children someday; Claire, especially, wants to have a son and name him Rupert. When Zach meets a man named Bart, he has a very personal human crisis: is he happy?—LA-Lawyer
- Zach Elliot (Michael Ontkean) is a successful young doctor in the Los Angeles area married to Claire (Kate Jackson), an equally successful television network producer. They have been married for eight years and are generally happy in their relationship, sharing in common a love for Gilbert and Sullivan and the poetry of Rupert Brooke, to whom they were introduced by their elderly former neighbor, Winnie Bates (Wendy Hiller). Intending to start a family, the couple buy a big house together.
Unknown to Claire, Zach has been struggling with feelings of attraction to other men. He picks up men in his car and starts frequenting gay bars in West Hollywood on his lunch hour, although he does not follow through sexually. This changes when he meets Bart McGuire (Harry Hamlin), a gay novelist who comes to see him for a medical check-up. Bart leads a fairly hedonistic single lifestyle, picking up multiple sexual partners, frequenting gay bars and clubs, occasionally taking recreational drugs. Zach and Bart have a mutual but unspoken attraction to each other and they go out for lunch.
A few days later, Zach calls Bart and asks him out for a dinner date. He lies to Claire, saying he has to work late. At Bart's house, Zach and Bart talk and it becomes clear that Zach is not yet able to identify as gay, instead labeling himself "curious". That night Zach and Bart go to bed together, which is the first time that Zach has ever had sex with another man. Afterwards, Zach wants to stay the night, but Bart, following his usual pattern, brushes him off. Angered, Zach leaves but returns the next day to confront Bart further about Bart's fear of intimacy. Bart makes plans for them to get together during the weekend.
Claire, concerned about the growing distance in her marriage, goes to her boss seeking a year-long leave of absence. Instead, he promotes her and sends her to New York City on a weekend business trip. Zach takes full advantage of the opportunity to spend more time with Bart, but they end up arguing. Zach calls the outline for Bart's new novel less than honest, and Bart confronts Zach about his own lack of honesty about his sexuality. That night in bed, Zach tells Bart that he loves him. The next morning, fearful of his own growing feelings for Zach, Bart pushes him away again.
(Throughout the film, Bart and Claire both deliver several mini-monologues, speaking directly to the camera about aspects of their lives and their feelings about the scenes that had just played out on-screen.)
Eventually, Bart realizes that he does have feelings for Zach but that he is not ready for the level of commitment that Zach needs. He is last seen in the film back out in the gay bars, cruising.
With Claire home from her trip, Zach tells Claire of his feelings for other men. Although she had said that she could handle anything he could tell her, she reacts very badly and Zach leaves the house. A few days later, an emotional Claire trashes some of Zach's clothes and finds a matchbook with a man's name and number written in it. She locates someone that Zach had picked up, and they talk. She learns from him that gay people can live normal and happy lives. Claire attempts to convince Zach to remain in the marriage, even claiming that she would be okay with him having affairs with other men, but Zach advises her that she must let go. Zach then tells Claire that he has a job prospect in New York City working with cancer patients. In the end, the two agree to a divorce.
The film jumps forward a few years later, with the death of Winnie Bates, Zach and Claire's former neighbor. Zach is living in New York and in a committed relationship with another man by this time, but he returns to Los Angeles for the funeral. Claire has since gotten re-married to an architect and has a young son named Rupert. After the funeral, Zach and Claire discuss their lives and each express their own happiness and their gratitude that the other is happy.
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