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Get Real

  • 1998
  • R
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
15K
YOUR RATING
Get Real (1998)
A tenderly romantic coming-of-age story as two boys in a British school fall in love.
Play trailer2:05
1 Video
16 Photos
ComedyDramaRomance

A tenderly romantic coming-of-age story as two boys in a British school fall in love.A tenderly romantic coming-of-age story as two boys in a British school fall in love.A tenderly romantic coming-of-age story as two boys in a British school fall in love.

  • Director
    • Simon Shore
  • Writer
    • Patrick Wilde
  • Stars
    • Ben Silverstone
    • Brad Gorton
    • Charlotte Brittain
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    15K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Simon Shore
    • Writer
      • Patrick Wilde
    • Stars
      • Ben Silverstone
      • Brad Gorton
      • Charlotte Brittain
    • 156User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:05
    Trailer

    Photos16

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    Top cast31

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    Ben Silverstone
    Ben Silverstone
    • Steven Carter
    Brad Gorton
    Brad Gorton
    • John Dixon
    Charlotte Brittain
    Charlotte Brittain
    • Linda
    Stacy Hart
    Stacy Hart
    • Jessica
    • (as Stacy A. Hart)
    Kate McEnery
    Kate McEnery
    • Wendy
    Patrick Nielsen
    • Mark
    Tim Harris
    • Kevin
    James D. White
    • Dave
    James Perkins
    • Young Steve
    Nicholas Hunter
    • Young Mark
    Jacquetta May
    • Steven's Mother
    David Lumsden
    • Steven's Father
    David Elliot
    • Glen
    Morgan Jones
    • Linda's Brother
    Richard Hawley
    • English Teacher
    Steven Mason
    • Cruising Man
    Charlotte Hanson
    • Glen's Wife
    Alina Hazeldine
    • Crying Baby
    • Director
      • Simon Shore
    • Writer
      • Patrick Wilde
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews156

    7.515K
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    Featured reviews

    bob the moo

    Surprisingly sensitive film

    Steve is a 17 year boy, still in school. He has long since decided he is gay but only meets men in the park for sex. When one of the people he meets in the park toilets turns out to be none other than the hunky head boy, Steve is unsure where he stands. However their relationship grows into lovers and they both balance the feelings brought around by secrecy and feeling like no one understands.

    From the sparky opening and good sense of humour, I had expected this film would just be another in the line of Richard Curtis-lite style of British romantic comedies. Indeed it does have this feel to it throughout - it has some good songs on the soundtrack and much of it is funny in that bittersweet way that British rom-coms seem to have claimed as their own. However what made this such a good film is the fact that it is a lot more sensitive and moving than most of this genre ends up being. The plot may well drag a little at times, but it never really seems unrealistic or dull.

    The characters are part of the reason it does so well. It is rare in the mainstream to see gay characters portrayed fairly and without caricature - HBO's 6 Feet Under is one of the rare ones, but this does as well. I wish that all those who hold up `Will & Grace' as a milestone in gays in the mainstream could all sit and see how much better it is when done like this! The dialogue is good and none of the characters are fake or pointless. Of course some react the way you expect them to, but the fact that they have been drawn well stops them being lazy - just broad. The film is weak in some pretty important areas however. The main one being the lack of relationship between Steven and John - I never saw them together and all they had in common is their sexuality.

    The cast do pretty well with the characters, even if some of them are being held up by the good script. Silverstone is great in the lead - he gives a really low key performance that even extents to his `speech' scene - where he could have really hammed it up some. Gorton is not as good but does do sterling work. The support cast are mixed although all do their jobs ably enough.

    Overall this is a great little film that will never get the same success as the Richard Curtis comedies from which it borrows a bit of it's style, however the script is really strong and it is quite unarming in how well it deals with the issues without cliché or lazy caricature of characters.
    10Mitch-38

    A Tender, Realistic and Superb Gem

    Intelligently scripted, well-crafted and exceptionally acted story of a young gay man finding his way through the adolescent wilderness. The situations that arise, when one finds themselves serving too many masters, are portrayed in a moving, heart warming manner. A great balance of relevant humor and teenage emotional tribulation is struck, without so much as a gram of maudlin melodrama, which normally crops up in films of this nature (especially American ones). In the good ol' USA, teenage development in movies tend to be played for laughs or for mawkish sentiment, which could propel whining into an Olympic event.

    In a short summation, Steve Carter, the main protagonist, finds the path to love strewn with thorns. His friend and counsel, Linda, walks the same road. Steve in discovering himself, discovers that anguish is also a companion to love.

    GET REAL does just that in such an honest, disarming way, that it exudes originality. The performances and characterizations, are far ranging and finely realized. There's not a weak link in the chain, either in performance, script execution or direction. Innovative and fresh from start to finish. A contemporary classic that is highly recommended.
    JUANCA

    FANTASTIC

    WOW!! Id never even heard of this movie until I just happened to turn it on this morning at 6am. The memories it brought back, the pain it evoked, the ultimate triumph at the end. Not a dry eye in the house, and I'm the only one here!!! I was shocked to read it's not won any big awards (but then again, that's probably why I haven't heard about it) It certainly deserves them!!! I'm so torn up inside remembering my father finding out I was gay. It was the only time I ever saw him cry. 2 days later he had me admitted to a mental hospital. I idolized my dad, and I still do. He just couldn't understand. I don't blame him, but it was so painful. I was only 14. This movie is a must see for a number of reasons. Those reasons will become known only to you when you let them in.Whoever you are. A son, a dad, a friend. A boy who's confused and scared. Don't miss it.
    8shrine-2

    Ben Silverstone rules!

    If "Get Real" chronicles anything, it is that messed-up jumble of a time that gay men have as teenagers, trying to be true to themselves without giving too much offense to those who abhor them. The mixed-up measures they take to express themselves and give expression to their feelings of desire and adolescent lust, suppressed by community morality and repressed by personal fear and self-hatred, unfolds over the London suburb of Basinbroke where a stick figure of a 16-year-old--Steven Carter--sits in or outside a public bathroom, trying to make contact with someone. He finds it unexpectedly with the big man on the high-school campus who garners immeasurable pleasure from their private meetings, but cannot bear the thought of being outed. The story passes through a grist mill of situations that leave the viewer with the simplistic notion that everything will be fine, if you just have the courage to be yourself with others. If it were that easy, I'm sure Brandon Teena would still be alive today.

    Adapted from Patrick Wilde's play "What's wrong with being angry," "Get Real" sends a manifesto to parents and teachers about the supposed pressures they may be putting on their children, gay or otherwise. If you're willing to accept it on this level, the movie functions as an emotional release for all those pent-up gay teenagers who couldn't vent their anger and frustrations at the forces that impose on their burgeoning dreams. But if you try to take it any deeper, then you'd have to consider the internal struggles of John Dixon, the object of Steven's desire, because that is one of the few places in this movie where something is at stake. Johnny (as Steven likes to call him) travels a thornier road, and although Brad Gorton doesn't quite seem up to the challenge, his self-conscious jock does not seem so much a coward in the end as someone saddled with all the trappings of his gentrified upbringing who doesn't want to let go of them. Johnny Boy's smart, but like all teenagers, he's thwarted by desires that defy his good sense.

    And that is a shame, because if there ever was reason to give up everything for love, Ben Silverstone would be it. He is the real find in this picture. He's the most elegantly constructed scarecrow to touch the silver screen (Seeing him, Conrad Veidt and "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari" come to mind.), and it's amazing what calm he brings to the center of this movie. Unlike newcomer Gorton, the camera loves Silverstone, and it takes him in as if he were born to be in front of it. If that weren't enough, this young actor (He is about the same age that Steve should be.) has a voice that rivals Jeremy Irons for expressiveness and majesty. Imagine him as Hamlet or Edward II or in a remake of "Brideshead Revisited" and that sultry sound pouring forth in velvety plenitude. Why, it's enough to make you stand up and salute the Queen Mother.

    With Stacy Hart as the iridescent Jessica whose dance with Steve is probably the sexiest scene in the entire movie.
    10duce122

    Let's Get Real!

    I rented the movie "Double Jeopardy" one evening and was skipping through the previews when I saw the trailer for this movie. I had heard about it before from a few friends who had seen it and had read about it in TIME magazine, not knowing much about the movie. Growing up in a household where being "different" in that sense is not acceptable, it has been hard for me to deal with my issues without support from my parents. I went to the local video store a few nights ago and immediately picked out "Get Real" to watch and enjoy. What I didn't expect was how true to life this movie really is!

    "Get Real" is the story about a 16-year old gay teenager named Steven Carter (played by the boyishly adorable Ben Silverstone) who has known about himself since he was 11-years old and is perfectly fine with it. Although he is dying to be accepted for who he is and not for who he pretends to be, he is afraid to tell his peers and his parents about his true nature. Only his best friend Linda (Charlotte Brittain, who delivers a terrific performance) knows and is worried about Steven, due to his sexual adventures at a gay men's restroom in a park. But one day, he unexpectedly has an encounter with the "straight" high school jock John Dixon (Brad Gorton, who plays his role of someone with much sexual confusion with complete realism) and the two boys fall in love. Steven wants to be open about the relationship, while John wants to hide his love for Steve. These differences, along with many others than I will not spoil for those who have not seen this, lead to one of the most tear-jerking endings I have ever seen in a movie.

    Bravo to everyone involved for creating such a realistic story! Being gay is not easy these days, especially for teenagers, but we all wish we were as brave as Steven, who matures as the movie goes on and we all hope the best for him as he embarks on his emotional recovery after the end of this movie. Way to go Steven!

    If you haven't seen this movie, see it soon! It is worth your every buck!

    RATING: 10 out of 10!

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Film location of Basingstoke, Hampshire. Using the summer house in The War Memorial Park - depicted as a public toilet
    • Goofs
      In the scene in the school newspaper office, when Mark discovers the anonymous article "Get Real", he reads aloud from the article: "The assumption that your children are heterosexual may be causing them pain." The close-up on the computer screen shows that sentence as: "The assumption that your children are heterosexual may be destroying their lives."
    • Quotes

      John Dixon: Fag?

      Steven Carter: W-what?

      John Dixon: I mean, uh...

      [holds out cigarette]

      Steven Carter: Oh. Um. Sure.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: Entrapment/Three Seasons/The Winslow Boy/Idle Hands/Get Real (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Staying Out For The Summer
      Written by Nigel Clark, Andy Miller (as Andrew Miller) and Mathew Priest (as Matthew Priest)

      Performed by Dodgy

      A&M Records Ltd., London

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 30, 1999 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ubícate
    • Filming locations
      • Basingstoke, Hampshire, England, UK(War Memorial Park. The Vyne School. Festival Place. Top of Town. Down Grange. Odeon Cinema)
    • Production companies
      • Distant Horizon
      • Graphite Film Production
      • British Screen
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,152,979
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $54,254
      • May 2, 1999
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,176,597
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 48m(108 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby SR
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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