Keep the Lights On

Keep the Lights On

By Ira Sachs

  • Genre: Independent
  • Release Date: 2012-09-07
  • Advisory Rating: Unrated
  • Runtime: 1h 42min
  • Director: Ira Sachs
  • Production Company: Tiny Dancer Films
  • Production Country: United States of America
  • iTunes Price: USD 9.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 3.99
5.799/10
5.799
From 91 Ratings

Description

KEEP THE LIGHTS ON chronicles an emotional and sexually charged journey of love, friendship, and addiction. In New York City in 1998, documentary filmmaker Erik (Thure Lindhardt) and closeted lawyer Paul (Zachary Booth) meet through a casual encounter and soon find themselves embroiled in a deeper connection. Over a decade-long relationship defined by highs and lows, Erik struggles to negotiate his personal boundaries and dignity, while Paul battles the demons of drug dependence. Harrowing and romantic, visceral and profound, Ira Sachs’ fearlessly personal KEEP THE LIGHTS ON looks at love and all of its manifestations, from despair to grace.

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Reviews

  • Ira Sachs = amazing movies

    5
    By pinksquirrel
    Ira Sachs is one of the greatest directors working today - it's hard to believe that the reviewers here who have given the movie low marks don't have a personal axe to grind - it's either that or simply bad taste - his movies are always slices of real life - go watch Die Hard for the 100th time if this isn't your thing. Real life IS action.
  • A big disappointment

    2
    By Rudy_Chasal
    This was the second movie directed by Ira Sachs I tried to watch. From now on, his name will symbolize that his movies aren’t worth bothering with. His attempt to portray his leading actors as living a life like anyone else failed. They’re terrible actors. They were so unconvincing. I couldn’t finish watching the movie. What a waste of my money, but it won’t happen again because Ira Sachs is bad news, no matter how hard he tries.
  • Art imitates real life

    4
    By mrdithers66
    This is a great little film based on the ill-fated, real life love story of Ira Sachs and his former partner. This is not a movie for those with the all-too-common attention span of maggots who would be better served by watching "Eating Out 13." There is little in the way of the titular, gratuitous sex, nudity, and manufactured drama that pervades American cinema in general, but which has long-since passed cliché, effectively stifling almost all creativity and storytelling in American gay cinema. Rather, the sex, nudity and drama is incidental to the story and burns at a slow pace, punctuated by fits and starts until the fabric of the relationship is torn to shreds-past the point of repair. Like it happens in real life; not the "life" manufactured by movie studios looking to sell box-office tickets.
  • Truth be told.

    5
    By Jack1084
    On honest look at life, relationships. Agree with the last review. A Classic!
  • Moving

    4
    By CandidHams4000
    Brutal but beautiful. Really loved it because of the honesty everyone brought to the piece.
  • Incredibly slow and flat

    2
    By TacoBill1
    I've dealt with a lot of addicts and there was little of the anger, drama, scenes, lies, damage, excuses, etc that are a part of all that. In fact if you read the other side's version -- Portrait of an Addict as a Young Man -- you wouldn't believe it was the same story. Sach's gives a much more muted and sanitized version with only hints of the chaos that must have been going on. For me, it was all a little too flat.
  • How slow can it get?

    1
    By AllOfMyFiveCents
    Cliché movie. Just cause it's with gay characters half the scenes are in the bedroom- is this the only way to show love? No character development. Tries too hard to be 'arty', 'indie', or whatnot but instead it's simply painfully slow.
  • Weak script ruins it

    2
    By Paul Joseph Bradley
    Note: a semi-spoiler alert exists near the end of this review. I so much wanted to like this movie, but the bad writing makes it impossible to care much for the poorly drawn characters. The plot summary says Paul is a closeted lawyer. Really? Closeted to whom? You never see it. After just a few minutes of screen time together, Erik tells his friend how "very nice" Paul is. Really? I saw no evidence of that. Disjointed scenes make no narrative sense; supporting characters drift in and out with little relevance to the story or even understanding of who they are; and the late, sudden "ultimatum" out of nowhere with the characters suddenly reversing their desires after 90 minutes of displaying the opposite sentiments was unbelievable and incomprehensible. This movie needed depth to work instead of skit-like, superficial scenes one after the other. What a shame.
  • Nice Try

    3
    By JohnGentile12
    Good news: A love story with gay characters that isn't so much a "gay movie". Those are usually terrible. Bad news: boring movie, no character development. Neither of these guys are particularly likable. For drama to work, you have to care about them or hate them or something, but there was just nothing. Plus, you're just not going to look that good being addicted to meth for several years. They should have hired a make up person, or looked up how meth addicts actually look. I've probably thought about this review longer than the writers of the movie thought about what they were doing.
  • SO GOOD!

    5
    By .boris
    Great film, provocative and powerful. The cast is amazing.

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