The Stepfather 2
- Video
- 2015
- 1h 35m
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- ConnectionsFollows The Stepfather (2014)
Featured review
Engaging chamber drama concerning Gay loneliness
It's not a tribute to Terry O'Quinn and the movie role that launched his career, but rather an introspective drama about old friends and young bucks from Adult filmmaker Nica Noelle. Matt Stevens is solid in the central role, with sensitive support from Nica's favorite actor, Adam Russo.
Matt has moved into Russo's New England home, that he shares with young lover Sean Cross. Stevens is feeling down, just having gotten a divorce and being estranged from his step-son Caleb King, who feels he has been abandoned just like his mother.
There unfolds a quiet, heart-strings drama that one would associate in mainstream cinema with a vehicle about lonely women, perhaps starring Sandy Dennis or Elizabeth Hartman back in the day. That is the novel touch that Noelle brings to her work, having made the most unusual switch from directing mainstream porn and lesbian videos to her current obsession with male couplings, and one step-further, males dating trans-females.
Directed in a minor key, and lacking any earth-shaking dramatics, this second volume in the series benefits from its integrated approach, telling one story rather than the more usual four vignettes compiled together. Key dramatic twist concerns a visit from stepson Caleb, who sees his step-dad sleeping with same- age pal Russo, causing Caleb to flee. He eventually returns, in time for a reconciliation (in the sack, crypto-incest underlying all of these stories of late) with daddy.
Sex with condoms applied is convincing for these characters, and the tale is fleshed out with the nearly mandatory extraneous sex scene, in which Sean shares sack time with another friend more his own age, Wolf Hudson, much to the chagrin of Russo when his lover runs off with Wolf. For his usual prowess in bed, Hudson is oddly missing from both the opening and closing credits, only mentioned on the DVD liner.
Matt has moved into Russo's New England home, that he shares with young lover Sean Cross. Stevens is feeling down, just having gotten a divorce and being estranged from his step-son Caleb King, who feels he has been abandoned just like his mother.
There unfolds a quiet, heart-strings drama that one would associate in mainstream cinema with a vehicle about lonely women, perhaps starring Sandy Dennis or Elizabeth Hartman back in the day. That is the novel touch that Noelle brings to her work, having made the most unusual switch from directing mainstream porn and lesbian videos to her current obsession with male couplings, and one step-further, males dating trans-females.
Directed in a minor key, and lacking any earth-shaking dramatics, this second volume in the series benefits from its integrated approach, telling one story rather than the more usual four vignettes compiled together. Key dramatic twist concerns a visit from stepson Caleb, who sees his step-dad sleeping with same- age pal Russo, causing Caleb to flee. He eventually returns, in time for a reconciliation (in the sack, crypto-incest underlying all of these stories of late) with daddy.
Sex with condoms applied is convincing for these characters, and the tale is fleshed out with the nearly mandatory extraneous sex scene, in which Sean shares sack time with another friend more his own age, Wolf Hudson, much to the chagrin of Russo when his lover runs off with Wolf. For his usual prowess in bed, Hudson is oddly missing from both the opening and closing credits, only mentioned on the DVD liner.
helpful•10
- lor_
- Aug 26, 2016
Details
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
- Color
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