Love Is All You Need?

For the film directed by Susanne Bier, see Love Is All You Need. For the feature film based on this short, see Love Is All You Need? (2016 film).
Love Is All You Need?
Directed by Kim Rocco Shields
Produced by Dana Garner
Written by Kim Rocco Shields
David Tillman
Starring Lexi DiBenedetto
Carrie Lazar
Sheri Levy
Dante Thorn
Cinematography Sandra Valde-Hansen
Production
company
Wingspan Pictures
Release dates
  • 2011 (2011)
Running time
17 minutes
Language English

Love Is All You Need? is a 2011 short film, directed by Kim Rocco Shields with Lexi DiBenedetto serving as the protagonist and narrator. The plot of the story takes place in a reversed society where homosexuality is the majority and heterosexuality is considered taboo.[1][2][3] In 2014, it was announced that the short would be adapted into a feature film, with Shields returning as the director and writer with some of the original cast returning. The film was based entirely on true events.[4][5]

Plot

Narrated by Lexi DiBenedetto, the short begins with the birth of the lead character, Ashley, her mothers, Karen (Levy) and Vicki (Lazar) at the scene. The story moves on where Ashley describes her early troubles of being an in-the-closet heterosexual.[3] One event included a church sermon that rejected opposite-sex relationships except for reproduction; another detailed her playing house with her friends.[4][6]

Ashley experiences several other events during her life. Her parents are unsupportive of heterosexuality, not knowing that their daughter is, using heterophobic slurs, like "breeder" and requesting that their children walk a different route to school after a straight couple move into their neighborhood. At school, she experiences physical and emotional bullying after it is discovered she is in a relationship with a male classmate (Dante Thorn).[2][6] Later, his older brother and his companions physically attack Ashley and one of her own friends writes hetero on her forehead. Upon arriving home, her parents have received a phone call about their daughter's sexual orientation. Vicki proceeds to instruct Ashley to "march upstairs and get cleaned up". Karen, unlike her wife, disagrees, causing the two women to argue. Ashley begins to clean the marker from her face in the bathroom, where she later decides to commit suicide due to the stress she has been through. As she bleeds from a self-inflicted wound, she continues to receive hateful text messages on her phone. At the end, Karen and Vicki eventually burst through the locked bathroom door to find Ashley's lifeless body.[2][4][5]

Reception

Love Is All You Need received mostly positive reviews.[5] Reviewers on the Internet Movie Database have described the short film in acclaim, as "powerful," "thought provoking" and full of raw emotion. Film critic Jodie Mullen also gave a positive review, writing that the story was "truly inspirational".[3][5] After viewing Love is All You Need? at the 2011 Atlanta Film Festival, Larry McGillicuddy wrote the film was "an incredibly powerful statement against bigotry, bullying, and oppression."[6]

Feature film

After it was announced that the short would be adapted into a full-length movie, an additional story line was included, revolving around a female football player who enters a relationship with a male journalist. The film will also include Ashley's story and DiBennedetto has been confirmed to reprise her role.[7][8][9] Levy and Lazar will also appear, appearing as a nurse and a "Female Commentator," repectively.[10] Additional cast members include Elisabeth Röhm, Emily Osment, Mike Manning and Jeremy Sisto.[7]

References

  1. "Love Is All You Need? (2011)". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 5 May 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 "Love is All You Need? - The Short". Retrieved 8 May 2014.
  3. 1 2 3 "Love Is All You Need? (2011)". Retrieved 5 May 2014.
  4. 1 2 3 Love Is All You Need? Dir. Kim Rocco Shields. Prod. Dana Garner. Screenplay by Kim Rocco Shields and David Tillman. Perf. Lexi DiBennedetto, Carrie Lazar, Sheri Levy. 2011.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Mullen, Jodie Beth. "Love Is All You Need? (2011) Movie Review". Retrieved 5 May 2014.
  6. 1 2 3 McGillicuddy, Larry. "2011 Atlanta Film Festival - Love is All You Need". Retrieved 5 May 2014.
  7. 1 2 "Love Is All You Need? (2015) Full Cast & Crew". imdb.com. Internet Movie Database. 2015. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  8. "Love Is All You Need? - The Feature". Retrieved 8 May 2014.
  9. "Love is All You Need? (In development)". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 5 May 2014.
  10. "Love Is All You Need?". IMDb Pro. Retrieved 8 May 2014.

External links

Official website

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