He's Such a Girl

2009 "When life gets hard, find your soft side."
He's Such a Girl
4.2| 1h21m| en| More Info
Released: 01 January 2009 Released
Producted By:
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

The basic premise is that Whitney is a really great guy who is considered too gentle, too friendly, and too genuine to be straight. Actually, he's straight, and he's madly in love with his girlfriend Taylor. Whitney has a best friend, Aldo, who is the worst best friend a nice guy ever had. Whitney is ready to marry Taylor, but Taylor keeps telling him to wait. To wait. To wait. Taylor has a secret and Aldo knows the secret. He won't tell, if . . .

... View More
Stream Online

The movie is currently not available onine

Director

Producted By

Trailers & Images

Reviews

Paul Magne Haakonsen I sat down to watch "He's Such a Girl" thinking that it was going to be another run-of-the-mill romantic comedy. However, this was not really in that particular alley. So was that good or bad? Well, I suppose it was good, in the sense that it differed from what I had expected.However, the movie just failed to really entertain me in a proper way. Director Sean Carr set out to accomplish something that I really didn't fully appreciate, or perhaps I was just not in the target audience. Regardless, then I must admit that I found the movie to be less then mediocre, and there were very little to elevate the movie for me.What did work out in favor of "He's Such a Girl", was some of the acting. However, keep in mind that you are not in for something awe inspiring or particularly memorable. There are some talents that manage to keep the movie somewhat afloat, despite having very little to work with.There weren't any moments of laughter throughout the course of this movie, and that was something that really pulled the enjoyment towards a negative direction.All in all, then "He's Such a Girl" manages to land a mere four out of ten stars from me.
derekph-1 AVOID THIS MOVIE! YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED! SPOILERS AHEAD! I found this on Netflix online, and it seemed to have a gay theme, though that was unclear, but I'm gay and decided to try it anyway.Just to be clear – the theme is Lesbian – sort of, though I find it hard to imagine anyone would relate to that. Whatever – not gay.To start with, a cute cast, and lots of ambiguity and confusion, and all of that drew me in and made me overlook my serious misgivings. The first half hour was OK, but none of the characters seemed at all grounded in reality. Still, I was hoping the two male leads would find comfort in each other's arms.But the farther it went, the clearer it was that nothing interesting would happen, and the more ridiculous it got. Elements that at first seemed humorous and engaging got really creepy and disturbing. And every character turned out to be so damaged and deluded that I hated them all.Let's start with "Whitney," the male lead. He's adorable, but totally F'd up. He claims he had a wonderful family, but then his father died suddenly (how heartless!), and his mother's reaction was to leave town on a world tour, with a whispered plea "Don't hate me." She then torments her son with postcards from everywhere. Whitney is a wreck. Really? The guy is twenty-something, he should have some balls by now. But no. No balls – hence the title, I guess. Want a doormat? Call Whitney.Whitney's girlfriend "Taylor," with whom he's been living for several years, is the product of a seriously dysfunctional family – fundamentalist Christians of the creepiest sort. Her father makes her take baths while he recites scripture to her, to cleanse her soul. Seriously. She leads a double – no, triple – life: dutiful saintly daughter, loving virgin-slut straight girlfriend, and (oh no!) lesbian. Which one will she choose? Whitney, who has NO idea about Taylor's lesbian side (even though he watches her kiss her girlfriend), wants her to marry him, but she "needs more time," adding to Whitney's misery. Awww.Trailing along after Taylor is her high school boy friend "Aldo," who knows her deep dark secrets, and makes her give him hand-jobs in return for his silence (I'm NOT making this up).Aldo pretends to be Whitney's friend, but lies to him nonstop. And Whitney believes every word, despite Taylor's warnings.Then there's "Tara," Taylor's real soul-mate, her lesbian lover, who pops up periodically demanding that Taylor make a choice.Whitney is so brainless and puppy-dog faithful and trusting that it's hard to believe ANYONE could want to spend five minutes with him. His mother tries to come home, but takes one look at his desperate face and turns around and flees again – who can blame her? Taylor is so damaged and deceitful it's hard to believe anyone would want her either.Aldo is just desperate. And totally creepy.The whole mess drags on and on and on, with complications so absurd they would be funny if any of it were less brainless. As it is, I just kept gaping in amazement and disgust.Tara finally forces Taylor to make a choice, and the two walk off hand-in-hand into the sunset.Blech! Please save yourself the time you will waste watching this piece of garbage. You WILL regret it.
Red-125 He's Such a Girl (2009) was directed by Sean Carr. It's a modest little independent film that doesn't aim very high and goes about as high as it aims.The basic premise is that Whitney (Bryan Fisher) is a really great guy who is considered too gentle, too friendly, and too genuine to be straight. Actually, he's straight, and he's madly in love with his girlfriend Taylor (Tiffany Dupont). Whitney has a best friend, Aldo (Will Stiles), who is the worst best friend a nice guy ever had.Whitney is ready to marry Taylor, but Taylor keeps telling him to wait. To wait. To wait. Taylor has a secret (Can you guess what it is?) and Aldo knows the secret. He won't tell, if . . .OK--Whitney is pushing, Aldo is scheming, and Taylor is telling Whitney to wait just a little bit longer. I said to myself, "If Taylor says 'Please, just give me time' once more, I'm going for coffee." The coffee was excellent, and the cookie wasn't bad either.We saw this film at the Little Theatre as part of the first-class ImageOut: Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. Insofar as it works at all, it will work well on DVD.