Kirpianuscus
its simplicity is the basic detail. and the poetry of small gestures. and the kind of reference to madeleine of Proust. but the element who gives coherence to the story is the spirit of age. it gives coherence and credibility to a small story of two boys looking to impress or under the fascination of kiss. and the most important moment has the great virtue to remind many memories from the viewer past. the kiss, its taste, the last scene , when the bitter meeting is covered in the taste of orange , are the ingredients of a powerful story about meanings and truth and force of revelation to change everything. so, a lovely short film. touching, tender, fragile, more than realistic.
Horst in Translation ([email protected])
"Oranges" is an Australian 11.5-minute movie from 2004, which means it's already over 10 years old. the director is Kristian Pithie and neither he broke through nor one of the actors in the years since this was made. For pretty much everybody working on this one, it is still their most known work today. The film's title describes nicely the color used mostly in here, but that's already all the positive I can say. These gay-themed short films often have the problem that they are either completely uninteresting or completely unrealistic and this one here is the former. All the story that happens is basically a boy bragging to another boy about his experience with girls, later they kiss and then they see each other again. This is not enough of a plot, if you can even call it a plot. With the title (color), it seems to be a very pretentious movie that is style over substance for sure. It is absolutely not worth checking out. Bland and uninteresting, I give it a thumbs-down.
meaninglessbark
Oranges is an unusual short in that it captures stumbled upon intimacy and curiosity in a realistic manner.Unlike a lot of queer shorts (and feature length films) Oranges doesn't try to titillate with gratuitous shots of young bodies, jar with a sudden negative turn of events, or have characters spouting dialog that sounds like it comes from a script.Oranges feels like being there for a strange and awkward afternoon. For anyone who ever had similar encounters it's like reliving those moments.Well shot, acted, and directed Oranges is definitely worth finding online to watch.
preppy-3
Two young Australian boys (Thomas Blackburne and Martin Sharpe) meet after one crashes his bike into the others car. They walk around and the older boy talks about all the girls he's kissed and how he's dating three girls at once. Then they get alone, share a sweet simple kiss and discover the truth.Short and bittersweet film. It's very quiet and has two actors who are exceptional their roles. They also appear to be the same age as the characters they play. No big loud pronouncements or any drama. Just a laid-back quiet approach to how young men are dealing with being gay. The only drawback--the Australian accents are thick and it's sometimes hard to hear what they're saying. Still--well worth catching.