After an anonymous encounter, a high schooler obsessively searches dating apps to find a mysterious stranger from a sex party, prioritizing instant gratification over meaningful relationship... Read allAfter an anonymous encounter, a high schooler obsessively searches dating apps to find a mysterious stranger from a sex party, prioritizing instant gratification over meaningful relationships until this fixation takes hold.After an anonymous encounter, a high schooler obsessively searches dating apps to find a mysterious stranger from a sex party, prioritizing instant gratification over meaningful relationships until this fixation takes hold.
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Director Samuel Van Grinsven's first feature explores a 16-year-old's sexual encounters that turn awry, in coming-of-age turned into thriller Sequin in a Blue Room, which won the audience award last month at Sydney Film Festival.
Sequin in a Blue Room tells the story of Sequin (named after the crop top he always wears when having sex), a gay teenager looking for sex with older men. Sequin (Conor Leach) lives in Sydney and mostly spends his time on hookup-apps looking for potential fun, while his family and friends don't have a clue what happens when they're not looking. Van Grinsven's queer film is one for the ages and sketches a very modern tale of what it's like to grow up in the age of social media.
One of the main characters of the film isn't one in the flesh, but rather one on screen in the form of text and visuals. Chris Johns' motion graphics never become overpowering and guide us through the story that develops under Sequin's thumbs, scrolling through lists of nameless yet labelled headless torsos. Sex and fear go hand in hand, and that's just what thrills the young man, blocking whomever he's met just after each encounter.
The title cards which are very present in the film, count down to the ending of the story. But the one that sticks the most is its opening sentence - 'a homosexual film by Samuel Van Grinsven'. Editor Tim Guthrie and the director wanted to pay tribute to Gregg Araki's New Queer Cinema, where Van Grinsven got his inspiration from. The cinematography by Jay Grant is mostly spellbinding and pulls you in by his use of colour, neon lights and closeups.
Here is where newcomer Leach comes up in full force. This fresh face plays Sequin with such confidence, you'd say he is this character in real life. Face acting galore, giving the right amount of looks and smirks to tell his story without even making a sound most of the time. This queer coming-of-age story turns dark while Sequin looks for love in a hopeless place when attending a sex-party in the titular location. Being mesmerised by a young man (Samuel Barrie), a married man (Ed Wightman) he met earlier becomes concerned with Sequin's reckless behaviour and turns into a threat that won't go away.
Co-written by Jory Anast, we also get to explore the relationship between Sequin and his unsuspecting father (Jeremy Lindsay Taylor). The boy isolates himself indoors, to which his father becomes more and more concerned there's more going on than just puberty happening under his roof.
After screening at Sydney Film Festival, where it received the audience award for best feature, the film is now headed for OutFest in Los Angeles to then screen at Melbourne International Film Fest in August. I had the opportunity to interview Van Grinsven and have a chat about the film and his plans with it, don't expect this talented filmmaker to slow down anytime soon. He clearly knows how to blend different genres while making a narrative that isn't overloaded with dialogue. I can't wait to see what Samuel has in store for us, but saying I'm excited is an understatement. Sequin in a Blue Room is New Queer Cinema at its finest.
Sequin in a Blue Room tells the story of Sequin (named after the crop top he always wears when having sex), a gay teenager looking for sex with older men. Sequin (Conor Leach) lives in Sydney and mostly spends his time on hookup-apps looking for potential fun, while his family and friends don't have a clue what happens when they're not looking. Van Grinsven's queer film is one for the ages and sketches a very modern tale of what it's like to grow up in the age of social media.
One of the main characters of the film isn't one in the flesh, but rather one on screen in the form of text and visuals. Chris Johns' motion graphics never become overpowering and guide us through the story that develops under Sequin's thumbs, scrolling through lists of nameless yet labelled headless torsos. Sex and fear go hand in hand, and that's just what thrills the young man, blocking whomever he's met just after each encounter.
The title cards which are very present in the film, count down to the ending of the story. But the one that sticks the most is its opening sentence - 'a homosexual film by Samuel Van Grinsven'. Editor Tim Guthrie and the director wanted to pay tribute to Gregg Araki's New Queer Cinema, where Van Grinsven got his inspiration from. The cinematography by Jay Grant is mostly spellbinding and pulls you in by his use of colour, neon lights and closeups.
Here is where newcomer Leach comes up in full force. This fresh face plays Sequin with such confidence, you'd say he is this character in real life. Face acting galore, giving the right amount of looks and smirks to tell his story without even making a sound most of the time. This queer coming-of-age story turns dark while Sequin looks for love in a hopeless place when attending a sex-party in the titular location. Being mesmerised by a young man (Samuel Barrie), a married man (Ed Wightman) he met earlier becomes concerned with Sequin's reckless behaviour and turns into a threat that won't go away.
Co-written by Jory Anast, we also get to explore the relationship between Sequin and his unsuspecting father (Jeremy Lindsay Taylor). The boy isolates himself indoors, to which his father becomes more and more concerned there's more going on than just puberty happening under his roof.
After screening at Sydney Film Festival, where it received the audience award for best feature, the film is now headed for OutFest in Los Angeles to then screen at Melbourne International Film Fest in August. I had the opportunity to interview Van Grinsven and have a chat about the film and his plans with it, don't expect this talented filmmaker to slow down anytime soon. He clearly knows how to blend different genres while making a narrative that isn't overloaded with dialogue. I can't wait to see what Samuel has in store for us, but saying I'm excited is an understatement. Sequin in a Blue Room is New Queer Cinema at its finest.
This is a very fine piece of film-making. It avoids many of the clichés of gay themed films, covering territory which is fresh and engaging. It's beautifully shot and edited, although the dialogue was delivered in a slow hesitant manner which was initially off-putting, but actually suited the mood of the film. It follows a very young gay man who unwittingly puts himself in some potentially dangerous situations. It is surprisingly successful as a suspenseful thriller, but quite unlike any thriller I've seen before, gay or mainstream. Being such an original and unusual approach to gay film, I'm sure it will polarise viewers (as is evidenced by some of the dismissive reviews) but for those who genuinely admire cinema, and are looking for something beyond coming-out stories and an endless supply of boy-meets-boy stories, this film offers a great deal. Very impressive; I'm looking forward to seeing more from this team.
This was an intense but powerful film. It's not always easy to watch but Samuel is clearly an exciting up and coming filmmaker with a strong voice. And I can't believe this was made as a student project - Very impressive! Looking forward to seeing what he does next!
10Dr_Zen
This is a really refreshing Australian made gay film, with a well written script, plot and great acting. I was pleasantly surprised with this film, since we don't see many Australian made gay films of this calibre. This film explores the theme of fantasy/projection/desire vs reality. The reviewer eelen-seth has already posted an excellent review of "Sequin in a Blue Room", so there's no need to repeat - I concur with what they said!
I highly recommend all young gay men watch this film, because there is a life lesson to be learnt in "Sequin in a Blue Room", in the age of digital sex. It's OK to have fun and explore new things in life, but remember to stay grounded at the end of the day, so you don't end up in the mess that Sequin did.
I'm looking forward to buying a copy of this movie for me collection, because I'll definitely be wanting to watch it again and again. Well done to the makers and actors in this film.
I highly recommend all young gay men watch this film, because there is a life lesson to be learnt in "Sequin in a Blue Room", in the age of digital sex. It's OK to have fun and explore new things in life, but remember to stay grounded at the end of the day, so you don't end up in the mess that Sequin did.
I'm looking forward to buying a copy of this movie for me collection, because I'll definitely be wanting to watch it again and again. Well done to the makers and actors in this film.
Cute young red head, bonus! Where are your friends, like even one your age online? I didn't understand, kid or not, why wouldn't stop behavior that puts him in danger. Interesting how staff turned blind eye and not shown. If this was grown adult, have at it with risks. The blue room was so off putting, big chunk of movie. For me anyhow not realistic, would never attend. The same glitter sequin outfit he wore over and over made me want him to be a kid shopping at mall for other alternatives. Not a movie to recommend or stay in gay collections.
Did you know
- TriviaVan Grinsven said the colour blue was almost entirely removed from the film; the outside scenes had no blue skies, and it was not visible in the costumes, set design and grading. He wanted to reserve it for the scene in 'The Blue Room', where the anonymous group sex party takes place. His reasoning for excluding the colour was to explore the effect it had on the audience when a certain colour is withheld and then you are suddenly immersed in it.
- How long is Sequin in a Blue Room?Powered by Alexa
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- Also known as
- Sequin en la Habitación Azul
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Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $12,872
- Runtime
- 1h 20m(80 min)
- Color
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