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Getting Go, the Go Doc Project

  • 2013
  • Unrated
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
Tanner Cohen and Matthew Camp in Getting Go, the Go Doc Project (2013)
Trailer for Getting Go, the Go Doc Project
Play trailer1:51
1 Video
4 Photos
Feel-Good RomanceDramaRomance

A shy but smitten college boy pursues a NY go-go boy through the pretext of making a documentary film about him, with the guys knowing each other only as "Doc" and "Go."A shy but smitten college boy pursues a NY go-go boy through the pretext of making a documentary film about him, with the guys knowing each other only as "Doc" and "Go."A shy but smitten college boy pursues a NY go-go boy through the pretext of making a documentary film about him, with the guys knowing each other only as "Doc" and "Go."

  • Director
    • Cory Krueckeberg
  • Writer
    • Cory Krueckeberg
  • Stars
    • Tanner Cohen
    • Matthew Camp
    • Ramon O. Torres
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    3.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Cory Krueckeberg
    • Writer
      • Cory Krueckeberg
    • Stars
      • Tanner Cohen
      • Matthew Camp
      • Ramon O. Torres
    • 21User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Getting Go, the Go Doc Project
    Trailer 1:51
    Getting Go, the Go Doc Project

    Photos3

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    Top cast5

    Edit
    Tanner Cohen
    Tanner Cohen
    • Doc
    Matthew Camp
    Matthew Camp
    • Go
    Ramon O. Torres
    Ramon O. Torres
    • Actor
    • (as Ramón Olmos Torres)
    Judy McLane
    Judy McLane
    • Actress
    Tedd Merrit
    • Actor
    • (as Tedd Merritt)
    • Director
      • Cory Krueckeberg
    • Writer
      • Cory Krueckeberg
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews21

    6.93.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8CubsandCulture

    A very painful film...suffers from indie problems

    There are too many sequences of this film that drag on past the narrative point of including them. In particular the final near silent montage of kissing delays the climax far too much. The pace of the story is killed as a result. Further, several of the montages of Go border on the hypocritical given the rest of the film's commitment to discuss the rampant objectification of people in the gay community. The film is 20 minutes too long as a result. Likewise, there is a amateurish quality to the performances that prevent a more polished film. Camp and Cohen have good chemistry but they are not great actors. Camp, especially, doesn't seem to understand what subtext is. The docudrama construction feels like a vain attempt too hide this. The film is largely experimental in its filming (They shot at Camp's actual apartment for example) and this can be rather off putting at times.

    With that being said the film is quite good. The story is a painful, and a painfully accurate exploration of several major tensions present within the gay community. The notions of too much sex, the cost-benefits assimilation, how to be gay, the various "tribes" of gay men and fickle nature of the male gaze all get a hearing in the film. I related to much of it but I can't say I found it much more than hey this problem exist. A lot of it is left unresolved. That is probably a realistic viewpoint but it adds to the indie vibe of the film.

    The film is quite forward in its depiction of homoeroticism. I found the sex scenes very naturalistic. I am not sure if I have seen gay sex depicted as realistic as I have seen here. The film does provide a nice counterpoint to the heteronormative depictions of the male form one usually finds.

    I am glad I own this but it is a challenging film to watch.
    10emerald-294-746620

    Great film, True to life...well, at least mine.

    This film didn't turn out to be what I thought it was going to be...it was better.

    As an old fart it took me a short while to adjust to the style of the film making. It's truly wonderful how affordable and accessible film making has become these days....Thanks Apple. Just start watching and let it all wash over you. Be patient.

    The young actors were superb. I had seen Tanner Cohen in Were The World Mine. He was very good in that as well. Mathew Camp seems to have made his debut in this film. Very competent and naturalistic in his performance. Amazing in his complete, complex character portrayal. Who knows? Maybe he is so similar to and comfortable in his characters skin. I don't really care. He was just a pleasure to watch as was Tanner.

    I believed both of those boys characters.

    The arc was just as it should have been. Realism to the core.

    Don't know if the dialogue was improvised or loosely scripted. It seemed so spontaneous and natural that either those two boys are extraordinary actors or the writing is excellent or all of the above.

    That's what I liked about the film....believability and accurate portrayal of those two individual's humanity. Served to show that love, especially young and fresh love, never changes. It's a blissful state of insanity. I have experienced the situations and feelings of both these characters back in the days of innocence, youthful optimism and raging testosterone.

    This film reflected all of that.

    I have been vague with details of the film because discovering it as one goes along is an important part of the pleasure.

    Here's how much I was impressed, mesmerized, entertained and stimulated....I just bought the film from Wolfe Video.

    It's available on NetflixStreaming, clips on YouTube, VOD from Wolfe Video.

    I'm in love with both of those boys.

    Great job.
    jm10701

    Unconventional and delightful

    A gorgeous, early-20s gay virgin in Manhattan (if you believe there ever could be such a person), just about to graduate from Columbia and then west to Iowa for grad school, fakes a documentary film project in an attempt to meet a gorgeous gay go-go dancer he's become obsessed with online. To his surprise the dancer goes along with the idea. The fake documentary leads pretty quickly to some very real sex and a lovely, tender, sort-of relationship.

    Actor and singer Tanner Cohen, the star of Were the World Mine (made by the same guys who made this one, but MUCH different), plays Doc, the almost-Columbia-grad virgin. Matthew Camp, a real live go-go dancer, plays Go, who is actually himself. The movie was shot in Camp's own apartment, gym, club, supermarket, etc, and follows his regular daily and nightly routine. The only fiction is the business with Doc.

    From beginning to end, nothing about this movie is conventional or predictable. Unlike 99.9% of gay men who see this, I thought Doc was lots sexier than Go, but the nerdy type with a totally natural body appeals to me lots more than the buff, shaved, go-go boy type. But Go is very smart and has an angelic face, and inside he's ten times sweeter and more appealing than Doc is - one of the sweetest and most appealing characters ever to appear in a gay movie. Matthew Camp is thoroughly delightful. Definitely, definitely worth seeing.
    7CinemaSerf

    Getting Go, the Doc project

    My initial thoughts of this were not great. The iPhone arms-length POV style of juddery photography made me think it was going to be an amateur effort. Well it is, but it isn't... The gorgeously charismatic Tanner Cohen is the younger than his years, inexperienced - on all levels - ("Doc") who falls for an erotic dancer online whom he calls "Go" (Matthew Camp) and comes up with a ruse to get to meet him and explore how he lives his life. Surprisingly, "Go" accepts the proposals and we end up with a love story told in a mix of cinematographic styles with one of the most erotically charged sex scenes I think I've ever seen from US gay cinema. Not raw sex with noise and sweat; but based on intimacy and a genuine affection for each other. Occasionally the scenes may linger a little too long; the pace of the editing could certainly have been tighter - but then maybe it would have lost some of it's authenticity and the characterisations some of their depth. Sometimes real life meanders a bit - we all have plenty of pointless times/conversations in our lives - adds to the richness. I hated the ending; but that's because all I wanted for the pair simply wasn't what they wanted for each other. In a world of largely frothy, contrived plastic drama, this is a stand out piece of creative, observational cinema with two really good, fun, engaging performances.
    6sinmora

    Blurred Lines

    This is quite a hard movie to pin down. It blurs documentary with movie with reality, and sometimes it does so amazingly. And sometimes it does so HORRIBLY.

    At times, I cringed at how stilted and dull the acting was between the two leads. It is painfully obvious when they are reciting lines from a script.

    But then... the curtain is pulled back and everything feels so REAL. Did they suddenly find a burst of acting talent, bringing the script to life? Are they simply flying by the seat of their pants, every line adlibbed? Or are they simply playing "themselves", bringing their own thoughts and feelings onto the screen?

    Personally, I don't know, but it gives the film this odd duality of fabricated reality. Sometimes its so painfully obvious that you're watching two subpar actors parroting lines at each other. But then not even five minutes later, the dialogue is flowing so seamlessly and the chemistry damn near jumping off the screen.

    I can't understand it. It just boggles my mind and leaves me in a weird place.

    I think with better actors we wouldn't have gotten some of the "real" moments that the film portrays, making the film weaker. But on the other hand, talented actors would have elevated the more obviously scripted portions of this film.

    I just don't know. I say approach this film with an open mind and you'll probably be both pleasantly surprised and woefully dissapointed in equal measures.

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    Related interests

    Omar Epps and Sanaa Lathan in Love & Basketball (2000)
    Feel-Good Romance
    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
      In the scene where Doc first visits Go's home, he films the objects around the house. In Go's bedroom, the camera shows a collection of clutter in which an envelope with "Matt Camp" written on it. Matthew Camp is the actor playing Go
    • Goofs
      During the intro, Doc's laptop reveals that he is logged-in as "SPEAK productions" (the name of the production company).
    • Quotes

      Doc: My obsession has grown... into longing. It's like I wanna take care of him. I don't want him to make a living from the dollars of gropers anymore. I don't want him to seem as an object by anyone but me. I just want to rip that hat off his head so the world can see his eyes and not his ass. I'm really confused.

    • Connections
      Features Sleep (1964)
    • Soundtracks
      I Want You
      Written by Daniel J. Cartier (sesac)

      Performed by Daniel J. Cartier

      Published by Daniel J. Cartier Music (sesac)

      Courtesy of Daniel Cartier

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 4, 2013 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official Facebook
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Seduciendo a Go
    • Production company
      • SPEAK Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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