Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • Blue Film
  • Distant Call (A)
  • Ngwato
  • Saved by the Beauty of the World
  • Children of Silver Street Take a Stand (The)
  • Arctic Link
  • Divine Hammer
  • Woman Who Poked the Leopard (The)
  • Dinner (The)
  • Baracoa
  • Blue Boy Trial
  • Uncle Roy
  • Patty Is Such a Girly Name
  • 3 Atos de Moisés
  • Deadloch
  • Ballroom, danser pour exister
  • Bigfoot Woods
  • Beauty and the Beat
  • Mickey
  • At the Place of Ghosts
  • Divine Tragedy (The)
  • Man Walks Down the Street (A)
  • Stop! That! Train!
  • Rosebush Pruning
  • Summer Lost
  • House Was Not Hungry Then (The)
  • Outcome
  • Island Away From You (An)
  • Customer Journey
  • Thirteen Buttons to Heaven
  • Freddie: I Want it All
  • Hunting Wives (The)
  • I Love LA
  • Long Story Short
  • Consequences of Monsters (The)
  • Open Endings
  • Son of Sara: Volume 1
  • Male Gaze: Wild Youth (The)
  • Testament of Ann Lee (The)
  • Vladimir

Inside Boystown

Country: Canada, Language: English, 43 mins

  • Director: Louise Walker
  • Writer: Jason Margolis; Louise Walker
  • Producer: Louise Walker

CGiii Comment

Not quite sure why there are writing credits - there is no commentary, no apparent input from the 'writers'...apart from numerous simulated scenes that are wholly unnecessary.

It does come over as a vanity project or, an end-of-the-year college project. The constant shift between B&W and colour is as distracting as the excessive frilly editing and flippant camera work.

Male prostitution is a subject that films student leap on...almost all, without exception, fail.

There is something suspiciously wrong...in places, it seems scripted - so, perhaps, the writers did deserve the credit.

Dispensable, disposable, derelict...Walker has gone on to do nothing else.


No trailer...

The(ir) Blurb...

Inside Boystown is an intimate portrait of the lives of six male prostitutes who work the streets in Vancouver's chic Yaletown neighborhood. It blends interviews with the boys with commentary from three support workers who explain the dynamics of male street prostitution.

The film provides an honest and forthright look at a commonly hidden aspect of contemporary society.