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Latter Days
Directed by
C. Jay Cox
R
2003
1h 48m
Drama
,
Comedy
,
and more
7.0
44%
78%
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A promiscuous gay party animal falls for a young Mormon missionary, leading to crisis, cliché, and catastrophe.
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Where to Watch Latter Days
Kanopy
Free
Pluto TV
Free
Tubi TV
Free
+3 more
Cast of Latter Days
Steve Sandvoss
Elder Aaron Davis
Wes Ramsey
Christian Markelli
Jacqueline Bisset
Lila Montagne
Joseph Gordon-Levitt
Elder Paul Ryder
Rebekah Johnson
Julie Taylor
Mary Kay Place
Sister Gladys Davis
Erik Palladino
Keith Griffin
Amber Benson
Traci Levine
Khary Payton
Andrew
Rob Mac
Elder Harmon
Dave Power
Elder Gilford
Jim Ortlieb
Brother Farron Davis
Judee Morton
Noreen
Robert Lacroix
Quinn (Elizabeth's Date)
Terry Simpson
Dirk
Brian Patrick Wade
Stacy
Kurt Hargan
Stacy's Husband
Jason-Shane Scott
Christian's Sublet
C. Jay Cox
Director / Writer
Kirkland Tibbels
Producer
Jennifer Schaefer
Producer
Latter Days Ratings & Reviews
San Francisco Chronicle
Carla Meyer
Renders its gay and religious characters so stereotypical that neither lifestyle appears attractive.
Detroit News
Tom Long
A coming-of-age, coming-out, romantic comedy, religious intolerance flick, and if that sounds a bit crowded, that's because it is.
Philadelphia Inquirer
Steven Rea
A fairly flat, predictable tale.
St. Paul Pioneer Press
Chris Hewitt
The whole Mormon/gay thing would be plenty for one movie without also sticking in AIDS, the betrayal of friends and actors-trying- to-get-their- big-break.
Salt Lake Tribune
Sean P. Means
Writer-director C. Jay Cox has created a tender gay love story, and then buries it under shrill diatribes, plot clichs and one-note characters.
Deseret News (Salt Lake City)
Jeff Vice
Even those who aren't immediately put off by the film's brazen attacks on religion -- and in particular, the LDS Church -- will likely be bored by this clumsy, incredibly contrived comedy, which has little charm.
Seattle Times
Moira MacDonald
It's more melodrama than drama or love story, and Cox, who wrote Sweet Home Alabama, seems to have never met a stereotype he didn't like.
Washington Post
Michael O'Sullivan
It's timely, not to mention refreshing, to see an affirmation of true love over hot sex, along with a reminder that the two aren't necessarily mutually exclusive.
Boston Globe
Wesley Morris
Such a well-meaning but unambitious work that it's tempting to take it seriously even as you dismiss it.
Dallas Morning News
Charles Ealy
Despite the inherent clichs, Latter Days manages to rise above its formulaic plot, mainly because of the assured performance by Mr. Sandvoss.
The New Republic
Stanley Kauffmann
Although a good deal of what happens is predictable, the writer-director C. Jay Cox makes much of it pleasant.
Chicago Sun-Times
Roger Ebert
Everyone in this movie has been ordered off the shelf from the Stock Characters Store, and none of them wandered in from real life.
Chicago Tribune
Michael Wilmington
Surprisingly dowdy-looking, shot more like a scruffy little naturalistic slice of alternative L.A. life than the star-crossed lover's daydream it mostly is.
The Hollywood Reporter
Frank Scheck
Cox's screenplay, while occasionally lapsing into the sort of cliches endemic to so many gay-themed films, generally treats its unusual subject matter with dignity and complexity, and the characters are well-drawn and sympathetic.
Los Angeles Times
Kevin Thomas
At once romantic, earthy and socially critical, Latter Days is a dynamic film filled with humor and pathos.
New York Post
Lou Lumenick
Cox, who wrote Sweet Home Alabama, again trades heavily in stereotype and coincidence for his directing debut.
New York Times
Dave Kehr
This gay romantic melodrama draws on an unconscionable number of conventions, but works in the end because of its commitment to its characters and a handful of fine performances.
Village Voice
Ed Halter
Pilots its culture-challenging raison d'tre through an increasingly insufferable collection of gaysploitation conventions.
Chicago Reader
J. R. Jones
This sitcom setup is as bad as it sounds, and Cox never really surmounts it.
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