A conservative professor at a Christian college finds himself in a gay support group to stop their launch of an LGBT homeless youth shelter in their small town.A conservative professor at a Christian college finds himself in a gay support group to stop their launch of an LGBT homeless youth shelter in their small town.A conservative professor at a Christian college finds himself in a gay support group to stop their launch of an LGBT homeless youth shelter in their small town.
- Awards
- 3 wins total
Susan Mulholland
- Aunt Patty
- (as Susan Steele Mulholland)
Marvin LaViolette
- Justin
- (as Marvin Laviolette)
Featured reviews
This film is surprisingly well made. From the scene composition, costumes, sets and camera work, you can tell they have a healthy budget. The story is fun and light hearted enough to entertain, despite the very heavy topic.
This movie is much more than a movie. It is story that so many of us have lived and suffered. We gives hope and insures love will always win. I encourage anyone and everyone to see it, especially for the young ones of the LGBTQ community. It will give them hope and help them feel like they are not alone and have a voice.
Having survived the Plebiscite inflicted onto us here in Australia by a homophobic religious conservative government a few years ago, I have seen homophobia first hand. Thank god we voted in marriage equality but it was ugly and disgraceful and tarnished Australia's international reputation. Having said that, I love watching movies and tv series that depict same sex relationships and show homosexuality in a positive light. This film does that. It shows a christian professor who teaches wildly inaccurate and downright harmful information to his students, but when he infiltrates an LGBTQIA group and begins to learn about them and the gay community first hand, his internal growth begins. It's a sweet film, slow paced and gentle, and while it does have it's flaws, the acting can at times be wooden and it did get a little cliched at times, it was still a movie that conveyed a message of love and acceptance. Something we all sorely need right now.
I enjoyed this film and the information it shares. The characters were interesting and made me care about them. I thought the storyline was realistic. It's hard to believe people kick out their own children just because they say they are gay, but I know it happens.
A film that emphasizes love for you neighbor and show the impact a life filled with loving those around you with quiet joy should be watched by as many people as possible. We all need to remember to love.
Did you know
- TriviaStephen Shane Martin lived with director Kevin O'Brien during shooting
- How long is At the End of the Day?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 48m(108 min)
- Color
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