Out Loud

2011
Out Loud
5.9| 1h42m| en| More Info
Released: 28 July 2013 Released
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Synopsis

Six friends (three men, one gay and a woman) gather together in Jason's house outside Beirut for his birthday. Each of them has a very difficult family situation. During a long, intense night, eating, dancing and talking seriously, the young people make an ideal pact of love and friendship in the name of freedom, of a dream, of the hope for a better future. As in a new Decameron, modern rebels against the oppression, traditions, sexism and homophobia that permeate their society. But the violence of the real world breaks in on their splendid isolation. The first Lebanese gay movie, which was censored in its country of origin. This film combines different genres and styles: a Bollywood style format full of songs, choreographies and colours, but also a powerful melodrama, alternating moments of comedy and dramatic elements. A manifesto of liberty and emancipation, with a cast of actors as stunningly beautiful as fashion models.

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drtodds "Out Loud" (Lebanon 2011) This movie teeters in the balance between quirky and just plain bizarre. It is part comedy (ala Harold & Kumar); part musical (ala Bollywood); part melodrama (ala AfterSchool Special); and part social commentary.....yet somehow in the end it really worked for me. At the heart of the message is the effect of the intolerance of Conservative, Fundamentalist Religous Ideologies. This message is told through the friendship of four (very hot) Lebanese young men (Jason, Elvis, Louis, and Rami) -- each dealing with some secrets and ties to their past. The film starts on Jason's Birthday. He has just been dumped by a girlfriend and his buddies are rallying around him to cheer him up. In the course of conversation Rami reveals to his friends that he is gay....and that his dad caught him kissing his boyfriend (Ziad). Elvis calls Ziad and tells him to get to Jason's house ASAP and they will protect him. To complete the films Quintet is Nathalie...a woman that Elvis/Louis found online to be Jason's date for the night. Keeping up so far??? The five decide to run away together to give Rami and Ziad time to figure out how they are going to survive (both families are of the mindset to kill them for the disgrace). This evolves into a plan for the five of them to become a family...build a life together....raise a family together....til death do them part (obviously a highly controversial arrangement in the Muslim world!). What starts out as a light-hearted, farsical film, takes a very dark turn, then ultimately redeems itself before all is said and done. Despite the unusual style of storytelling, the film is visually stunning! The cinematography, filtering of colors and use of imagery was way above average even for most mainstream films. And the soundtrack (including the cheesy song-and-dance numbers) was beautiful to listen to. I REALLY had to "push through" the first 30 minutes of the film (fighting the urge to give up on it) but I am sure glad I did! [3.5/5]
outloudthemovie Amaya-Akkermans(The Mantle)May 30,2012 "Out Loud" – to put it in simple words – isn't only challenging the taboos of a society but also telling a beautiful story and at that successfully. Unlike most films that tell linear stories with socially relevant content – and somehow evoke the format of the traditional novel – there's hardly any social realism in it and the aesthetics of the film is somewhere between poetry and hope.Director Samer Daboul wanted to plant a seed for the future, and this film is precisely it. It is a question mark and an exclamation mark for all those who want to live in tolerance and equality. This film – Romantic, epic, sardonic – being humble as it is, is a microcosm of the real Lebanon that lurks underneath the wars and the endless political diatribes.
samerdaboul-313-634822 Variety Review June 1, 2011 by Jay Weissberg: It takes a brave man to make Lebanon's first gay-themed commercial feature. "Out Loud," helmer Samer Daboul and his cast are to be commended for their conviction and the palpable camaraderie on screen. Daboul's script needs greater discipline, but the characters, consisting of six friends, gay and straight, wanting to forge a new fellowship, have a winsome appeal. Pic's strength comes from the way Daboul presents this alternate "menage" as a loving group unconstrained by sanctimonious conditioning; they're hardly the only six like this in Lebanon, but the point "Out Loud" makes is that the fanaticism of a vocal, closed-minded mob is stifling a new generation whose values aren't dictated from a bully pulpit. The gay story is part and parcel with the others, not overwhelming the narrative, although it remains a crucial element.