The Cost of Love | |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Directed by | Carl Medland |
Produced by | Carl Medland |
Written by | Carl Medland |
Starring | Christopher Kelham, Caroline Burns Cooke, Mandeesh Gill, Michael Joyce, Valmike Rampersad, Israel Cassol |
Music by | Ram Khatabakhsh |
Cinematography | Amarjeet Singh |
Editing by | Amarjeet Singh |
Distributed by | Peccadillo Pictures |
Release date(s) | 2010 |
Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
The Cost of Love is a 2010 gay-themed film by Carl Medland, his debut long feature released by Discovery Films UK. It was filmed in Greenwich area in London starring Christopher Kelham as Dale. The film shows diverse characters and the price they pay for falling in love.
The film was an Official Selection for End of Pier International Film Festival in 2010 and the festival's closing film. It was also screened in 2010 at the East End Film Festival where it was also nominated for "Best UK Debut Feature".
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Told mostly in first person, it is the story of Dale (Christopher Kelham), in which reality and fantasy intermingle throughout in such a way that the viewer is left to wonder at all times if a certain scene (or all scenes) are actual or just Dale's imagination.
Dale is a hustler who from the onset of the film says he likes sex, lots of it and in all of its varied forms, including S&M. He spends his days cruising parks and saunas for casual sex or prostituting to high-paying clients making their sexual fantasies come true. Upfront with both his sexuality and his hustling ways to everybody, Dale's hard exterior is a mask to hide his very fragile shattered interior. He has developed a rampant imagination and fantasies of his own that he resorts to in many situations he is in.
Dale is longing for his best friend since childhood, the "straight" Raj (Valmike Rampersad) and has developed very romantic feelings towards him. Dale is shocked when Raj asks him to become his best man at a hastily arranged wedding with Veena (Mandeesh Gill)[1] a children's teacher. But there is more to it, since it turns out she is terminally ill and has only a few months to live.
Besides Raj, the other main character in the film is Sean (Michael Joyce, also known in gay scene as the drag artist Estee Applauder) who is Dale's confidant and has an obvious crush on him. Sean has to deal with Christine (Caroline Burns Cooke). There is also Ricardo (Israel Cassol) who is a Brazilian hunk escort and friend of Dale, and a partner in many of his hustling acts. Pete (Robert Gray) is another character who has to come to terms with his own sexuality through his involvement with Dale in a series of role-playing abusive relationship. Secrets are revealed when a stranger, Richard (Frank Jakeman) starts frequenting a bar where Sean is performing and makes approaches to reveal deep family secrets.
Homophobia is there with the murder of a young gay man on the Heath, a notable night-time cruising ground in London. Viewers are kept guessing whether this is actually Ricardo or some unknown character as Dale and Sean visit the site to put some flowers. This is also the prelude for a (real or imagined) fantasy scene where Dale is being murdered during an S&M act while he is fantasizing every detail of the gruesome torture and murder. And in a dreamlike "funeral scene", all the grieving characters are present in the church to "mourn" Dale's loss, while Dale is commenting on their lives after his departure, while they are reminiscing on the impact Dale had on all their lives.
(Others in alphabetical order)