Poster Boy

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Poster Boy
Directed by Zak Tucker
Produced by Jeffrey H. Campagna
Rebecca Chaiklin
Dolly Hall
Vince P. Maggio
Herbert Ross
Written by Ryan Shiraki
Lecia Rosenthal
Starring Karen Allen
Michael Lerner
Matt Newton
Jack Noseworthy
Valerie Geffner
Ian Reed Kesler
Austin Lysy
Music by Mark Garcia
Cinematography Luke Geissbuhler
Wolfgang Held
William Rexer
Editing by Trevor Ristow
Zak Tucker
Distributed by Regent Releasing
here! films
Release date(s) 2004
Running time 98 minutes (US release)
104 minutes (international release)
Country USA
Language English
IMDb profile

Poster Boy is a 2004 gay-themed drama film. It toured the gay and lesbian film festival circuit beginning in 2004 before a limited theatrical release in 2005.

[edit] Plot summary

The film opens with Henry Kray (Matt Newton) being interviewed by a reporter about the events about to unfold on-screen. Henry is the son of a powerful and conservative Senator from North Carolina. Senator Kray (Michael Lerner) has gained a national reputation in part by attacking homosexuality. Unknown to the senator, Henry is gay.

The senator plans to kick off his re-election campaign at a luncheon at Henry's college campus and he expects Henry to deliver his introduction. Henry's sexuality is something of an open secret around campus, to the extent that the campus gay activist group has created a chart of his sexual partners. The night before Senator Kray is scheduled to arrive, Henry hooks up with Anthony (Jack Noseworthy), a former ACT UP activist who's drifted away from activism.

The day of the speech, Anthony is approached by a campus activist who wants to enlist his help in outing Henry. Anthony and his friend Izzie (Valerie Geffner) have an argument about it and Izzie (who is HIV-positive) storms off. She's hit by the limousine transporting the senator and his wife Eunice (Karen Allen). The senator's party brings her along with them and Eunice takes a shine to her. She gives Izzie a suit and invites her along for the luncheon.

Henry invites Anthony as well, insisting that he sit at the dais with him. Henry introduces his father, who begins his speech. As the speech continues, Henry stands up, pulls Anthony to his feet and kisses him in full view of the national media, outing himself before the activists have the chance to. In the firestorm of controversy, the Senator and his team decide to spin the event by stressing that the Senator still loves his gay son. Meanwhile, one of the campus activists congratulates Anthony for outing Henry, and even though Henry decided to "out" himself, the bond of trust that had started to form between him and Anthony shatters.

The film closes with Henry summarizing the aftermath. He and Anthony don't see each other. Izzie has died of AIDS. The Senator won re-election despite, or perhaps because of, the controversy.

[edit] Awards and nominations

[edit] External links