![Shelter [Blu-ray] [Region Free]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71YLHLaP5WL.jpg)

A true classic and one of the most enduring modern gay romances of the last decade, SHELTER is finally here on Blue-Ray. Charged with the electric crackle of first love, this sweet and sexy California romance is about a confused young artist torn between his family and his future. Fresh out of high school, Zach (Trevor Wright) gives up a full scholarship to spare his 5-year-old nephew from their dysfunctional family. Now restless and isolated, the gifted youth toils at a local diner. But everything changes when he finds himself drawn to thirty-something Shaun (Brad Rowe, Billy's Hollywood Screen Kiss), a confident young writer. As the two hit the surf and Shaun's mattress with equal enthusiasm, they fall into a secret relationship that may give Zach the courage he needs to follow his passions. Review: Best Film of the Decade - I bought this film without reading any reviews because I liked the coming of age and coming out story line. But I did not know what to expect. I've bought a lot of Gay oriented films but most of the time have been extremely disappointed by the amateur feel of the film or the terrible writing or acting or both in many films. So I really didn't know what to expect. After watching this movie it felt like one of the best films Gay or Straight I've ever seen in my life! It was not only professionally done, but the casting was fantastic. the writing was fantastic, the acting was superb and the direction and production extremely well done!! I've rarely ever given a review of a film I've bought but this film was so good I can't stop talking about it! The screen play and script along with the great casting and acting made the characters come alive. Their interaction was not only believable but but you felt the definite connection between them. The story was so good, the acting was so good, as was the direction and production, that the audience cannot help but become emotionally involved. So many Gay oriented films end in tragedy. This film ends with an uplifting spirit of heartfelt hope that love can conquer all and win in the end. This is a beautiful film, a beautiful story, wonderful acting and fantastic cast, and great direction and production. It is so good that immediately after watching it I went online to buy another copy of the film to give as a gift to a friend. This is one of the best films I've ever seen!! It should have won many Indi awards and I wonder why it didn't? I highly recommend it to anyone, Gay, Bi, Straight... it doesn't matter, this film is that good! I can't say enough about it! Review: An Old Story that Rises Up on Emotional Authenticity - I am gay, but I dislike most of the gay movies out there. There are only a few exception: Brokeback Mountain, Borstal Boys and Beautiful Thing. All other gay movies are always victims to one of the followings: being too sensitive, or too chatty, or too corny. This is certainly an exception: no drag queens, no drugs, no gay bars, no AIDS victim, no party boys. And it's thoroughly refreshing. Enough good thing have been said about this movie, which is now in my very short list of favorite gay movies. A lot of reviews give credit to Trevor Wright for his excellent performance. Credit well deserved. However, I think director Jonah Markowitz deserve the most credit for putting together a movie in which everything feels so natural and real. The best part of this movie is the dialogue: It's short, precise and yet powerful. For example: the dialogue on the patio after their dinner: Shawn: "I admire what you are doing for Cody. You don't have to." Zach: "Yes. I do." Shawn: "It's a choice, Zach." Zach: "It's family." Zach: "The only one left." Shawn: "You get that from your mom." Zach: "Yeah, I know." Zach: "Lucky me." This is a simply love story. Even though the word "Love" was never said in the movie, there was never one moment of doubt how much they were in love. There are lots of little things in the movie that you will recognize if you were ever in love. When Zach was driving away after his first night with Shawn, a little smile slowly crept up his face, and he just couldn't hold it anymore, and scratched his head for getting a little embarassed on the silly happiness. Shane Mack also deserves high praises for the songs he wrote for this movie. When Zach couldn't fall asleep, flipping back and forth, the images of him with Shawn were flashing through his head. The moment wouldn't have such an emotional impact without Shane Mack's "More Than This" playing in the background. The negatives I can think of is that for someone who's never been with a guy, Zach was quite adept in stripping off Shawn's cloths that night. Also, Gabe would have seen Zach's truck outside when he barged in, and he's not the kind of person who wouldn't say anything about it. Sorry, I know I am nitpicking. But if you are like me watching this movie 10 times in the first week, you would be too. :-) I do have one issue with the cover of the DVD. If I hadn't read its review first to know what the movie is about, I would have easily dismissed it as another soft-core gay porn that's dressed up as a movie. There could be a hundred moments in the movie that would be a better cover than this bed shot. I have to believe that it wasn't picked by the director who has handled everything so tastefully without losing the erotic force. Thanks to AfterElton.com that listed it as the #3 of all time greatest gay movies, I didn't miss now-my-favorite gay movie that's not a tragedy (BBM and Borstal Boys) or a fairy tale (Beautiful Thing). In my opinion, David Wiegand from SF Chronicle has the best review on this movie: "Sometimes a film that otherwise relies on stock storylines and even skirts the fringes of old-fashioned melodrama can rise up on the strength of other elements. In the case of writer/director Jonah Markowitz's feature film debut, "Shelter" rises very high indeed, thanks to a superb performance by Trevor Wright in the lead role, a strong supporting cast, very good cinematography and, most of all, emotional authenticity." Update on January 2015: One last word: Jonah Markowitz needs to get to work. I have been waiting 7 years for his next movie. And I am about to give up hope. :-)
| ASIN | B005EYJV02 |
| Actors | Brad Rowe, Tina Holmes, Trevor Wright |
| Aspect Ratio | 1.77:1 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #307,489 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #73,044 in Blu-ray |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (1,307) |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | 807839005387 |
| Media Format | PAL |
| Number of discs | 1 |
| Package Dimensions | 6.7 x 5.3 x 0.4 inches; 3.2 ounces |
| Release date | October 24, 2011 |
| Run time | 1 hour and 37 minutes |
| Studio | TLA Releasing |
R**Y
Best Film of the Decade
I bought this film without reading any reviews because I liked the coming of age and coming out story line. But I did not know what to expect. I've bought a lot of Gay oriented films but most of the time have been extremely disappointed by the amateur feel of the film or the terrible writing or acting or both in many films. So I really didn't know what to expect. After watching this movie it felt like one of the best films Gay or Straight I've ever seen in my life! It was not only professionally done, but the casting was fantastic. the writing was fantastic, the acting was superb and the direction and production extremely well done!! I've rarely ever given a review of a film I've bought but this film was so good I can't stop talking about it! The screen play and script along with the great casting and acting made the characters come alive. Their interaction was not only believable but but you felt the definite connection between them. The story was so good, the acting was so good, as was the direction and production, that the audience cannot help but become emotionally involved. So many Gay oriented films end in tragedy. This film ends with an uplifting spirit of heartfelt hope that love can conquer all and win in the end. This is a beautiful film, a beautiful story, wonderful acting and fantastic cast, and great direction and production. It is so good that immediately after watching it I went online to buy another copy of the film to give as a gift to a friend. This is one of the best films I've ever seen!! It should have won many Indi awards and I wonder why it didn't? I highly recommend it to anyone, Gay, Bi, Straight... it doesn't matter, this film is that good! I can't say enough about it!
C**W
An Old Story that Rises Up on Emotional Authenticity
I am gay, but I dislike most of the gay movies out there. There are only a few exception: Brokeback Mountain, Borstal Boys and Beautiful Thing. All other gay movies are always victims to one of the followings: being too sensitive, or too chatty, or too corny. This is certainly an exception: no drag queens, no drugs, no gay bars, no AIDS victim, no party boys. And it's thoroughly refreshing. Enough good thing have been said about this movie, which is now in my very short list of favorite gay movies. A lot of reviews give credit to Trevor Wright for his excellent performance. Credit well deserved. However, I think director Jonah Markowitz deserve the most credit for putting together a movie in which everything feels so natural and real. The best part of this movie is the dialogue: It's short, precise and yet powerful. For example: the dialogue on the patio after their dinner: Shawn: "I admire what you are doing for Cody. You don't have to." Zach: "Yes. I do." Shawn: "It's a choice, Zach." Zach: "It's family." Zach: "The only one left." Shawn: "You get that from your mom." Zach: "Yeah, I know." Zach: "Lucky me." This is a simply love story. Even though the word "Love" was never said in the movie, there was never one moment of doubt how much they were in love. There are lots of little things in the movie that you will recognize if you were ever in love. When Zach was driving away after his first night with Shawn, a little smile slowly crept up his face, and he just couldn't hold it anymore, and scratched his head for getting a little embarassed on the silly happiness. Shane Mack also deserves high praises for the songs he wrote for this movie. When Zach couldn't fall asleep, flipping back and forth, the images of him with Shawn were flashing through his head. The moment wouldn't have such an emotional impact without Shane Mack's "More Than This" playing in the background. The negatives I can think of is that for someone who's never been with a guy, Zach was quite adept in stripping off Shawn's cloths that night. Also, Gabe would have seen Zach's truck outside when he barged in, and he's not the kind of person who wouldn't say anything about it. Sorry, I know I am nitpicking. But if you are like me watching this movie 10 times in the first week, you would be too. :-) I do have one issue with the cover of the DVD. If I hadn't read its review first to know what the movie is about, I would have easily dismissed it as another soft-core gay porn that's dressed up as a movie. There could be a hundred moments in the movie that would be a better cover than this bed shot. I have to believe that it wasn't picked by the director who has handled everything so tastefully without losing the erotic force. Thanks to AfterElton.com that listed it as the #3 of all time greatest gay movies, I didn't miss now-my-favorite gay movie that's not a tragedy (BBM and Borstal Boys) or a fairy tale (Beautiful Thing). In my opinion, David Wiegand from SF Chronicle has the best review on this movie: "Sometimes a film that otherwise relies on stock storylines and even skirts the fringes of old-fashioned melodrama can rise up on the strength of other elements. In the case of writer/director Jonah Markowitz's feature film debut, "Shelter" rises very high indeed, thanks to a superb performance by Trevor Wright in the lead role, a strong supporting cast, very good cinematography and, most of all, emotional authenticity." Update on January 2015: One last word: Jonah Markowitz needs to get to work. I have been waiting 7 years for his next movie. And I am about to give up hope. :-)
D**M
A Generously Spirited Love Story
"Pure being," a friend of mine once said enviously of the surfers riding the waves along the Southern California coast some thirty years ago. Though there was a strict demarcation between the gay section of the beaches and those parts that belonged to the surfers alone, even then a few surfers hung out at night in the Breakers or one of the other gay bars along Highway One, especially in Laguna. There, what seemed so easy a life out in the Pacific, just following the next big waves one after another, became less obvious and more conflicted. Stories about coming out have so dominated many gay films that the theme has developed into an archetype, a genre of its own with endless variations: from dark into light, from secrets into revelation. In Shelter, Zach is a young artist who has turned down a scholarship at CalArts in order to stay home to care for his nephew Cody. Zach has inherited the family gene, from his mother he says. All the concerns and nearly all the love the five year old Cody should find in his mother, Zach's sister Jeanne, he gets from Zach alone. Zach has had a long time girlfriend, but everything about their relationship is tentative, on hold. When he meets his best friend's older brother again after several years, they surf together, just as they used to. But Shaun is an openly gay man who has published a novel which Zach has read. Shaun's sexuality is no secret to Zach, but Zach's is to Shaun--as it may still be to Zach himself, at least in the sense that he has never before been with a man (or in all likelihood a woman; his responses to his girlfriend are mostly tepid, except when his real longings frighten him). What Zach wants more than anything are family and love. After a night during which he and Shaun kiss, Zach is happy but its meaning is still uncertain. He rides the waves, paces the deck of the house he shares with his sister and nephew in what he calls San Pedro's ghetto, then drives back to the family house on the beach where Shaun is staying to recuperate emotionally after a boyfriend has dumped him in L.A. What follows between Zach and Shaun is stunning in its impact upon both men. Their coupling, however, is not filmed as soft core porn, all or nearly all about the physical alone, but as love scenes. What matters most is the feeling shown through their eyes. All the acting in this emotionally profound film is superb, but the love beyond words Zach and Shaun manage to express just with their eyes has almost never before been seen in movies, not even, say, in Brokeback where to some degree it was often having to be hidden by one or the other man. What follows in Shelter is Zach's coming to understand what that love means to him for the rest of his life. Part of this is the usual problem of coming out to his friends and to his sister, though nearly all that effort is accomplished for him; they know before he tells them. But he must also come to see himself better; he must change, too, as he tells Shaun later. Part of that transformation is his discovering more fully who Shaun is. Shaun has been criticized by some viewers for being too patient with Zach. But patience is part of love, one of the virtues that help people abide all the messes we make or almost make out of our lives. When Zach learns that Shaun has mailed his application and portfolio to CalArts, he sees, quietly, the man's generosity. In a way, Shaun has shown that he loves Zach as kindly and patiently as Zach loves Cody. Zach's and Shaun's erotic communion is intense. But this is a love that is also caritas, deep, perhaps abiding. It is his recognition of that possibiity, if not certainty that leads Zach back to Shaun, especially after a talk with his girlfriend in which he says his only regret (about being gay) is that he wanted to make a family with her. In this moment between them, it is her goodness which allows her to encourage Zach to return to Shaun, to the different family he might find now through Shaun and with Cody. At least, she says, he should try. Near the end, after Zach and Shaun drive to the house to pick up Cody from Zach's sister who is moving to Portland with her rough boyfriend, Zach turns to Shaun and takes his hand in his. It is a gesture of love between them as telling as any more passionate embrace. The seemingly unencumbered lives both men had known together surfing when younger--Shaun the master, Zach the pupil in a running joke between them--has grown into a love that is in every sense good. I think this is one of the best movies ever made about gay men, searchingly decent and generously spirited about love without any loss in erotic force. It is also wonderfully realized, except in a few of the songs on the soundtrack, in both the director's eye and the hearts of all the performers, even those in relatively minor roles (Gabe is as perfect a surfer dude as one can imagine, but with more than the usual soul). But Trevor Wright as Zach gives to his character an especially touching complexity. Zach is in some ways still a kid, talking in the lingo of surfers, tagging buildings, riding his skateboard. But he's also emotionally older than everyone else in his life, already committed to a way of living many people never come to. His coming out is more painful to himself than it is to others perhaps because his need for real communion is already so great. Yet he finds it. This is emotionally complex work for so young an actor. But every gesture he makes, everything he expresses is true; no moment ever feels false or contrived. What the movie leaves one with is a sense of both the hopes and ambiguities of moral being, a far more difficult, yet greater life than merely riding the waves of one's youth.
A**O
..bellissimo!
み**お
日英ともに字幕がなく、自力のつたない英語力で見るしかなかった。 他の作品との比較をする場ではないが、今までみたゲイ作品では個人的に、一番素晴らしい、感動できた作品だと思っている。 人間関係が面白く、主人公が愛してしまう彼は友達の兄、姉も「ねじれた人」で、男や酒に溺れ、シングルマザーなのに子供より男という人物。その息子は主人公を父親視している、とねじれた人を描いている作品でもある。 姉が後半主人公をゲイだとなじる箇所は、「貴方に言われたくない」と思ってしまった。 ゲイだとなじられるシーンって必ず出てきますよね?汗 悩んだ主人公が最後に選択した自分自身は、心を打たれて涙したし、本来「彼女的な存在」の主人公が「彼」と手を繋いで[引っ張って]、姉貴の前に暗に彼を差し出した想いは、「よくやった!!」と心で叫んでいた。 彼ら三人家族の行く末は、子供の精神成長が心配だが、きっと上手くやって行く筈だと信じている。
M**7
This is an excellent movie that portrays the angst of a young man and his life. He has many pressures on him and he is battered about what he wants for himself and what he feels he needs to give in life with regards to his family. The roles are cast beautifully and the issues of sexuality include all the characters in the story. A sister who puts her needs over her young child, a brother that is abused emotionally by his sensitive nature and a friend and his brother who stand up for him... weave an interesting tale. This is not a "gay" movie with tantalizing sex scenes. This is an honest story and a film you will want to watch many times. Highly recommended.
P**E
Para mi gusto, Shelter es una de las historias de amor más bonitas que jamás se hayan filmado... Ojo, está en Inglés.
R**A
I don't have complains with the product itself, packaging is substantial and the quality of the footage is great. The only downside is that there are no subtitles. In terms of shipping, it took a while to process and send but it arrived on time and the shipping packing was alright.
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