Ethan Mao
- Director: Quentin Lee
- Writer: Quentin Lee
- Producer: Julie Asato; Ernesto Foronda
CGiii Comment
The script and acting are TERRIBLE.
This is a gay-Asian film and the PC people will all say good things about it - when, in reality, it is simply just too excruciating to watch.
Trailer...
The(ir) Blurb...
BOOTED OUT of his comfortable suburban house by his father for being gay after being outed by his manipulative stepmother, Ethan Mao, 18, survives on the street as a hustler selling sex to older men. He meets Remigio, 19, a drug dealer and sometime hustler, who befriends Ethan and takes him in. After being tipped off by his younger brother that his family is going on a day trip on Thanksgiving Day, Ethan asks Remigio for a ride to his family house to get some of his belongings and a necklace that belonged to his late mother. Ethan and Remigio break into Ethan's family house, but are caught in the act and believe they have no choice other than to hold his father, stepmother, and bullying stepbrother hostage. In the following increasingly desperate hours, Ethan, his family, and Remigio are forced to confront their unresolved conflicts between each other. As the tension between Ethan and his family escalates, their inner demons and family secrets unravel in this suspenseful drama.
Cast & Characters
Jun Hee Lee as Ethan Mao;
Raymond Ma as Abraham Mao;
Julia Nickson-Soul as Sarah Mao;
Kevin Kleinberg as Josh;
Jerry Hernandez as Remigio;
David Tran as Noel Mao;
Mary Gilbert as Mrs. Harvisham;
Rene St. Leon as Teenage Boy;
Jayne Taini as Waitress;
Erik Robinson as Rich Man;
Gregory Paul Daniels as Unseen Man;
Dana Pan as Ethan's Mom;
Michael Mesirow as Voice of Sheriff Black