Get Real (film)


Get Real is a 1998 British romantic comedy-drama film directed by Simon Shore, based on the play What's Wrong with Angry? by screenwriter Patrick Wilde. The plot is about gay teenager Steven Carter's coming out to the world. The film was shot in and around Basingstoke, England.

Synopsis

When homosexuality was still an absolute taboo in England, sensitive rural town model student Steven Carter hides his gay feelings, except with his neighbour, a girl named Linda. Suddenly his desperate search for partners in male public lavatories leads to a blind date with golden boy John Dixon, bound for an Oxbridge career. Steven finds the courage to approach John by volunteering for the school paper as sports photographer. A wonderful affair follows, but John is terrified of losing his social status. As the boys' love blossoms, so grows despair about secrecy or outing consequences.

Plot

Steven Carter is a 16-year-old middle-class schoolboy: intelligent and good-looking, but unathletic and introverted. Bullied at school, misunderstood at home, his only confidant is his neighbor and best friend, Linda. Keeping his sexuality hidden from everyone else, he cruises in public toilets. He is surprised to find the school jock, John Dixon also cruising, but John denies that he is gay.
At a school dance, Steven gains a friend after he comforts Jessica, after an argument with a boyfriend, who is also his bully, Kevin. When he returns home, John follows him and confides about his own sexuality. They decide to start a relationship.
Word around the school spreads about someone being gay in the school, and John fears that Steven has been telling people. In order to maintain his status in the school, John beats up Steven in front of his friends. Steven announces in front of assembly that he is gay, and looks to John for support, but he does not. In the end, John apologizes for beating him up and says he loves him, but as he is too afraid to come out, Steven breaks up with him, wishing him happiness.

Cast

Production

Get Real was filmed in and around Basingstoke from the 17th August 1997, before moving on to the Millenium Studios in Borehamwood on the 22nd September.. The entire movie took six weeks to shoot.
  1. LOCATION FILMING DATES
1 THE VYNE SCHOOL Aug 17th – Aug 25th
2 ALTON SCHOOL Aug 26th – Aug 27th
3 CRANBOURNE SCHOOL Aug 28th – Aug 29th
4 DOWN GRANGE SPORTS TRACK Aug 31st – Sep 1st
5 WAR MEMORIAL PARK Sep 2nd – Sep 3rd
6 MILLSTONE PUBLIC HOUSE Sep 4th
7 WARNER VILLAGE CINEMA Sep 5th
8 MARKET SQUARE Sep 7th – Sep 8th
9 ST MARY’S COURT Sep 8th
10 DELLANDS HOUSE Sep 10th – Sep 12th
11 SORRELL’S COPSE Sep 12th
12 FOYLE PARK Sep 14th – Sep 18th
13 FRITHMEAD CLOSE Sep 19th
14 LINK PHOTO SHOP Sep 21st

Reception

The film ranked number 34 on Entertainment Weekly's list of the 50 Best High School Movies.
The film was well received by many critics, and subsequently nominated for eight awards, and won six, including the British Independent Film Award 1998.
In the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Paula Nechak praised the film for allowing the characters to be themselves rather than change to fit in, and praises the treatment of the 'jock' character John as being just as bound by the school popularity game as Steven.
Roger Ebert commented "Certainly this film has deeper values than the mainstream teenage comedies that retail aggressive materialism, soft-core sex and shallow ideas about "popularity." Steven Holden from The New York Times wrote "The movie captures the excruciating paranoia of a situation in which there’s nowhere the lovers can be alone except in each other’s homes on the rare occasions their parents are out."
In the Daily Record, Siobhan Synnot criticised the film as being like a "preachy episode of Grange Hill with cardboard cut-out characters" and also criticised the John character for being unbelievable, describing him as "simply a bland fantasy hunk. It's hard to see how this dim bulb is bright enough for Oxford, because all the smart lines go to his smart-alec boyfriend."