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Adam & Steve

  • 2005
  • R
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
3.4K
YOUR RATING
Parker Posey, Craig Chester, Malcolm Gets, Chris Kattan, and Cary Curran in Adam & Steve (2005)
Theatrical Trailer from TLA Releasing
Play trailer1:43
6 Videos
6 Photos
Romantic ComedyComedyDramaMusicRomance

Follows two New York City couples, one heterosexual and one gay, who explore the peaks and the valleys of their respective relationships.Follows two New York City couples, one heterosexual and one gay, who explore the peaks and the valleys of their respective relationships.Follows two New York City couples, one heterosexual and one gay, who explore the peaks and the valleys of their respective relationships.

  • Director
    • Craig Chester
  • Writer
    • Craig Chester
  • Stars
    • Craig Chester
    • Malcolm Gets
    • Parker Posey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    3.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Craig Chester
    • Writer
      • Craig Chester
    • Stars
      • Craig Chester
      • Malcolm Gets
      • Parker Posey
    • 51User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
    • 48Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos6

    Adam & Steve
    Trailer 1:43
    Adam & Steve
    Adam & Steve Scene: Scene 3
    Clip 0:45
    Adam & Steve Scene: Scene 3
    Adam & Steve Scene: Scene 3
    Clip 0:45
    Adam & Steve Scene: Scene 3
    Adam & Steve Scene: Scene 1
    Clip 1:14
    Adam & Steve Scene: Scene 1
    Adam & Steve Scene: Scene 2
    Clip 1:00
    Adam & Steve Scene: Scene 2
    Adam & Steve Scene: Scene 4
    Clip 0:49
    Adam & Steve Scene: Scene 4
    Adam & Steve Scene: Scene 5
    Clip 1:00
    Adam & Steve Scene: Scene 5

    Photos5

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Craig Chester
    Craig Chester
    • Adam Bernstein
    Malcolm Gets
    Malcolm Gets
    • Steve Hicks
    Parker Posey
    Parker Posey
    • Rhonda
    Chris Kattan
    Chris Kattan
    • Michael
    Cary Curran
    • Cary…
    Noah Segan
    Noah Segan
    • Twink
    Sally Kirkland
    Sally Kirkland
    • Mary
    Jackie Beat
    Jackie Beat
    • Self
    Mario Diaz
    • Orlando
    Lisa Frederickson
    • Fiona
    Sandy Martin
    Sandy Martin
    • Biker Chick
    Michael Panes
    Michael Panes
    • Lou
    Jennifer Echols
    Jennifer Echols
    • Triage Nurse
    Jack Guzman
    Jack Guzman
    • Security Guard
    Maxine Prescott
    • Elderly Lady
    Brandon Miller
    • Survivalist in Park
    August Amarino
    • Drunk Patron
    • (as Augi Amarino)
    Steve Geary
    • Andy
    • Director
      • Craig Chester
    • Writer
      • Craig Chester
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews51

    5.83.3K
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    Featured reviews

    arizona-philm-phan

    "Adam & Steve in the Garden of Edxx........Manhattan"

    Craig Chester and Malcolm Gets (particularly this latter hunk, who's just so winsomely huggable---he seems so right at home, so comfortable with himself) have some real warm moments, and that doesn't often happen in gay-themed films these days. Unfortunately the pluses of this are more than a few times imbalanced by some of the following minuses:

    -An overage of what other review sites have called "gross-out" humor. I easily could have stood the early on diarrhea sight-gag, had its use not been later overloaded by the sometimes diarrhetic mouth of a stand-up club's master of ceremonies (Michael Panes, was it?) and of Parker Posey's character, herself, upon occasion. Why are such remarks, like the female-bestiality cracks in "The 40 Year Old Virgin" considered such fair game in humor these days? Puke!!

    -Perhaps a little over-reliance on Jewish "sensibility-moments."

    -Guess, overall, I just feel that Chester has been around long enough to: know better, turn out something better, just plain old be better. It can't have been inexpensive to roll out this product, so it just seems he could'a gotten a lot more for his buck (and we for ours).

    WHOA.....WHOA......WHOA.........STOPPpppp! You know what? I went back and "re-looked" this movie last night, and in the midst of my millionth laugh, it suddenly hit me that I hadn't really laughed any less the first night. Say, maybe I've been trying to make something too serious out of this little production, and that's not what it's about at all. It really doesn't have to be another "Brokeback Mountain" (as great as that was). Isn't it nice, instead, to have something that keeps our spirits up? Well, you bet.

    And we can have all the "sensibility-moments" they can throw at us......cause isn't there a good, old Hebrew word that just perfectly describes Adam? Isn't it something like.......Klutz (and a lovable one at that)? And being "sad-sacky," that can be funny too, can't it? Right on!

    Finally, on an even more positive note (for someone like me who's always placing gay kissing scenes*** under the old microscope), I'd have to judge that this production has not been afraid to give us a goodly number of 'osculating-lips-in-action' shots. Don't you agree? They weren't all perfectly aimed, but there were some really good ones.

    PS--So, congratulations, Adam & Steve, on your wedding and for being able to live in a world far removed from that of Jack & Ennis.

    ***And for scenes in which "lip-locks" were done as well or better, try these: "Just A Question Of Love" / "Latter Days" / "All Over The Guy" / "Brokeback Mountain" / "Maurice" / sorry, gotta stop somewhere)
    dinopass

    Disappointing

    Nothing more here than a standard, cliché, romantic comedy that you would find in a dozen Adam Sandler films or poorly written African American comedies except for that it focuses on a homoesexual relationship. None of the characters are believable, the tone is mostly a farce but there is not a lot of intelligence behind it.

    I believe this film is getting a decent buzz, primarily because the two leads are actually gay and rarely do we see supposed "real-life" portrayal of gays in romantic comedies.

    The filmmakers intent was to show what it is really like to be in a homosexual relationship and that they have the same feelings, concerns, desires, etc as heterosexual couples. The main problem is that the tone is so absurd and light and none of it seems like real life at all, you don't believe or engage in the characters at all so the message is lost. I am not gay and did not leave the film feeling any more informed about the difficulties of gay relationships or anything even close.

    There are some funny scenes and lines but also many awkward moments and irrelevant scenes just thrown in, and dialouge that just doesn't work. Many parts tried to be over the top and absurd just for the sake of doing so, nothing real or organic about them. The acting and pacing also needed work. I just didn't engage or become interested in the characters at any level.

    It didn't need to be as heavy or shocking as Queer as Folk or other gay films but moving the tone more toward Kissing Jessica Stein would have served it much better. Beleiving in the characters as actual people instead of over the to characatures would have let me empathize and allowed me to learn a lot more than I did

    The 9-11 references were empty and useless. I lived in NY at the time and if your're going to try to capture it at least give it some time, attention, and drama.

    Any I don't mean to focus on the gay aspect, it fails as a film period, straight, gay or other, but the producers/filmmakers are promoting it this way so that will inevitably be the focus.

    I'd be interested in hearing any opinions from anyone gay who saw the film to see if they felt it represented their struggles properly or if they were maybe just happy to see a light comedy focused on gay life.

    Will be interesting to see what happens if/when it is released
    Gordon-11

    It is refreshing to watch a film that has emphasis on love instead of on sex

    This film is a romantic comedy between two men in New York City. They by chance meet each other, get along very well, until things start to fall apart.

    It is great that throughout the film, the emphasis is on love, instead of sex. It is so easy to fall into the temptation to make scenes depicting gay sex in order to entice gay viewers to watch the film. However, in this film, there are no sex scenes at all. The thing that keeps the viewers watching is the real love that keeps Adam and Steve together. Coupled with the excellent character development, the love between Adam and Steve becomes convincing and touching.

    The dance sequences of this film are very well rehearsed and delightful to watch. The plot is straightforward and predictable, but that's the whole idea for romantic comedies.

    I hope gay romantic comedies get made more often!
    8gregv2k

    Well-done date movie

    What a fun, funny, sharp-witted, incisive film about the rocky road to romance. And how brilliant that it's about a gay couple-- a committed, monogamous gay couple who look very much like real gay human beings (as opposed to the broad caricatures usually seen in film and television). Is it possible that this will be the first "gay" date movie that straight couples will go to and laugh with?

    Maybe that's hoping for an America more open-minded than it is, but certainly the open minded heterosexual partners are in for a good time.

    Kudos to writer/directer Chester for creating what is an impressive mosaic of styles. In lesser hands the film, with everything from emotional honesty to slapstick comedy to over-the-top (and I do mean WAAYYYY over-the-top) camp, should be a mess. But somehow scenes of first love are actually made sweeter all the more by the slapstick running gag that accompanies them (sorry, no spoilers here!).

    The leads are extremely appealing, the dialog is well-realized, and the realities of dating are sharply realized in a film that walks the fine line between maudlin and frank but rarely feels dishonest. That's going to sound ridiculous in the context of a film that includes a choreographed dance-off featuring a drag queen, but the movie is wise to use broad strokes of humor to help otherwise clichéd movie devices go down easier. Additional kudos to Parker Posey, who becomes the heterosexual equivalent of the "Jack" character on "Will & Grace." Her comic contributions are note-perfect.

    Chester has commented that the use of comedy has a role in helping straight audiences better accept a budding romance between men. I hope that's true, because this film deserves better than the "cult" or "gay/lesbian" dungeon in your local video store.
    8preppy-3

    Very good and realistic

    Adam (Craig Chester) and Steve (Malcolm Gets) have an embarrassing one night stand in the late 80s. Then the movie fast forwards to 2005. They meet again but have no recollection of their earlier encounter. They fall madly in love...but then Steve remembers. Can they survive this? Also Adam's best friend (Parker Posey) falls in love with Steve's best friend (Chris Kattan).

    This is no masterpiece. It has its dead moments and there are some painfully unfunny moments--and where the hell did that two-stepping sequence at the end come from? Still it works more often than it doesn't and is easily one of the best movies I've ever seen dealing with a gay couple. When it's funny it's hysterical and some of the observations Adam and Steve make about being gay and in love are VERY accurate (Chester and Gets are gay in real life so it adds more to the lines--they speak from experience). Also Chester wrote the script AND directed it as well as starring in it--this guy is very talented.

    Acting is good all around. Gets and Chester are just great and perfectly believable. It's always great to see Parker Posey and she's just wonderful (catch her outfit at the two-stepping). Even Kattan is good--he annoyed me totally in SNL. And the supporting cast includes Julie Hagerty, Sally Kirkland and Melinda Dillon--all are just great.

    I saw this at a sold out viewing at the Provincetown Film Festival. The demand for this was so great they had to ADD an extra showing! This is the most truthful movie I've seen so far about gay life and love. Not perfect but damn close. A must-see for gay men.

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    Related interests

    Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal in When Harry Met Sally... (1989)
    Romantic Comedy
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Prince and Apollonia Kotero in Purple Rain (1984)
    Music
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The flashback in the beginning of the film takes place in 1987. The remaining film takes place in 2005.
    • Quotes

      Rhonda: I'm sweating like Whitney Houston going through customs!

    • Alternate versions
      The DVD release of the film contains several deleted and extended scenes with commentary from writer/director/star Craig Chester. The scenes are included in the film's novelization, also written by Chester. Most of the scenes were cut for time. The scenes featured on the DVD are:
      • An extended version of Adam's (Chester) opening visit to the support group
      • Adam saves Rhonda (Parker Posey) from a relapse into her food addiction at a barbecue restaurant
      • Adam recounts to Steve (Malcolm Gets) a sexual experience he had with a mime
      • Adam and Steve get ready to go country dancing
      • An extended version of the party at Steve's apartment, including more scenes with Jeff and Jeff's adopted daughter Ling-Ling
      • An extended version of Michael (Chris Kattan) telling Adam about Steve's past
      • Adam and Steve have a fight after Steve's party
      • An extended version of the dinner party with Adam, Steve, and Steve's parents
      • Michael wakes up to find Steve is not home and realizes he doesn't know how to operate without him (he tries to make coffee and realizes he doesn't know how)
      • Rhonda and Michael make out when Michael tempts Rhonda with a pie, which promptly ends up covering them both (Craig Chester admits that the scene was cut due to massive technical difficulties in staging it)
    • Connections
      Featured in Schau mir in die Augen, Kleiner (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      Dance Off
      Music by Michael Lloyd

      Written by Jackie Beat

      Performed by Jackie Beat

      Published by Michael Music

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 17, 2007 (Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Adam i Stiv
    • Production company
      • Funny Boy Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $309,404
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $66,429
      • Apr 2, 2006
    • Gross worldwide
      • $309,404
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital

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