G.B.F. (film)

G.B.F. (Gay Best Friend) is a 2013 American teen comedy film directed by Darren Stein and produced by School Pictures, Parting Shots Media, and Logolite Entertainment. The film had its first official screening at the 2013 Tribeca Film Festival in April 2013 and was released theatrically on January 17, 2014, by Vertical Entertainment. G.B.F. focuses on closeted gay high school students Tanner and Brent. When Tanner is outed, he is picked up by the cool girls and he begins to surpass still-closeted Brent in popularity.[2]

G.B.F.
Theatrical release poster
Directed byDarren Stein
Produced by
  • Stephen Israel
  • Richard Bever
  • Darren Stein
  • George Northy
Written byGeorge Northy
Starring
Music byBrian H. Kim
CinematographyJonathan Hall
Edited byPhillip J. Bartell
Production
company
  • Logolite Entertainment
  • Parting Shots Media
  • School Pictures
Distributed byVertical Entertainment[1]
Release date
  • April 19, 2013 (2013-04-19) (Tribeca)
  • January 17, 2014 (2014-01-17) (United States)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$3.2 million

The film stars Michael J. Willett, Paul Iacono, Sasha Pieterse, Andrea Bowen, Xosha Roquemore, Molly Tarlov, Evanna Lynch, Joanna "JoJo" Levesque, and Megan Mullally. G.B.F's soundtrack includes new compositions by "Hi Fashion" and "Veva".[3]

Plot

Tanner Daniels and Brent Van Camp are two closeted teenage high school students. Their school, North Gateway High in suburban New Jersey, is dominated by three feuding cliques respectively led by the three most popular girls in school: Fawcett Brooks, Caprice Winters, and 'Shley Osgood. Brent hatches a plan to out himself at prom, which will make him the most popular boy at school since the latest trend, according to teen girl magazines, is a GBF – a gay best friend.

Meanwhile, Soledad Braunstein is told by teacher Ms. Hoegel that their Gay-Straight Alliance (GSA) cannot exist if there is not a gay student in the club. Fawcett helps Soledad track down any potential gay students in the school by downloading a hook-up app for gay men. Brent previously persuaded Tanner to download the app on his phone and Soledad and her friends track Tanner down, forcing him to come out in front of the whole school. This attracts the attention of Fawcett, 'Shley, and Caprice, who all believe having a GBF will secure their bid for prom queen.

Angry, Tanner confronts Brent for not also coming out and harshly outs Brent in front of his overbearing mother Mrs. van Camp as revenge. Tanner quickly regrets it but Brent is no longer speaking to him and he reluctantly agrees to be friends with Fawcett, Caprice, and 'Shley, as the three girls protect him from homophobic bullying led by Fawcett's ex-boyfriend Hamilton. However, the girls express their disappointment that Tanner is not like the stereotypical gay men they have seen on television and make him over to their liking. Brent is annoyed at all the attention Tanner is getting, especially since Tanner has become nominated for Prom King. Likewise, 'Shley's conservative best friend McKenzie Pryce tries to persuade 'Shley that homosexuality is sinful.

At a party, Caprice sets Tanner up with Christian, a gay friend of hers, who is willing to be his prom date, but McKenzie refuses to allow Tanner to buy a couple's prom ticket, insisting they are exclusive to heterosexual couples. Tanner agrees to join Soledad's GSA since she is the only one willing to help him fight the school policy and chastises Fawcett, 'Shley, and Caprice for only caring about him when it benefits them. Chagrined, Fawcett also joins the GSA, but Ms. Hoegel quickly sees that Tanner is being used by the girls as a prize. Fawcett offers to hold an alternative prom, which pleases Tanner but enrages Caprice, who is annoyed that Tanner is endorsing Fawcett. Brent, believing that he is Tanner's prom date, is disappointed to learn that Tanner is going with Christian. He teams up with Caprice, who plans on being queen of the school-endorsed prom and offers to let him be her king. Tanner and Brent's old friend group, Sophie and Glenn, confront them and reveals how they are being used as tools, and Tanner asks Fawcett if this is true. Fawcett admits that she was, but she now does consider him a real friend. She also tells Tanner she created the second prom to win since most of the school dislikes her. Tanner agrees to help her win prom queen after hearing this.

Brent manages the publicity department for the school-sanctioned prom and uses explicitly anti-gay posters. The principal cancels the school prom due to the ensuing public backlash and supports the alternative prom. Tanner and Fawcett win prom king and queen and Tanner makes a speech at the dance, saying that he is tired of being seen as an object or a symbol and apologizes to his true friends for dumping them. Tanner dances with Brent and they make up, although they decide to stay friends instead of being romantically involved and risk a friendship that is already sturdy in its own right.

Cast

Production

Development

George Northy was working at an ad agency and chipping away at a screenplay, G.B.F., about a school with a new trend: All the girls need to have this season's hottest accessory of a gay best friend.[2] Northy searched the Internet for LGBT screenwriting competitions and turned up listings for Outfest's Screenwriting Lab and NewFest's NewDraft Screenplay Contest. By the time both festivals came around last summer, Northy was a finalist for both.[2] Guinevere Turner, with the Outfest Lab, sent the script for G.B.F. to Darren Stein.[2] Stein told Indiewire, "I thought, since it came from Guinevere, that it would be a dark script. I read it and I was laughing out loud. It felt like a classic teen movie. It jumped off the page in a way that most screenplays don't. It was so snarky and smart, about something close to my heart and culturally relevant. It wasn't message-y or preachy. I was very, very excited. It's very rare to laugh out loud reading a script."[2]

After reading the script, Stein decided to direct the film and passed it onto his manager who got investors involved with the project. Raven Symoné was in talks to star in the film following the table read however eventually passed on the project.

Filming

Principal photography took place in Los Angeles over 18 days.[2]

Rating

The film received an R rating from the MPAA for "sexual references". Director Stein responded to the rating by saying, "I always thought of G.B.F. as a PG-13 movie, but we were given an R 'For Sexual References' while not having a single F-bomb, hint of nudity or violence in the film. Perhaps the ratings box should more accurately read 'For Homosexual References' or 'Too Many Scenes of Gay Teens Kissing.' I look forward to a world where queer teens can express their humor and desire in a sweet, fun teen film that doesn't get tagged with a cautionary R."[4]

Release

G.B.F. made its official Hollywood premiere at Chinese 6 Theater in Los Angeles, California on November 19, 2013. Prior to its theatrical release, the film was screened at many film festivals.[5]

Critical reception

The film has a score of 80% on review-aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes based on 41 reviews, with an average rating of 6.39/10. The site's consensus reads, "G.B.F. explores high school relationship dynamics and teen stereotypes with a refreshingly humorous touch - and surprisingly subtle smarts".[6]

On Metacritic, the film has a 56 out of 100 rating based on 14 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[7]

Home media

The film made its DVD debut on February 11, 2014 in the US.[5][8]

Soundtrack

Gay Best Friend (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Soundtrack album by
Various artists
ReleasedJanuary 14, 2014
Recorded2013
GenrePop, EDM
Length54:09
LabelLakeshore Records

The soundtrack was released by Lakeshore Records to all digital retailers on January 14, 2014.[9] The thirteen-track album was originally scheduled to include new compositions by JoJo, Michael J. Willett, Hi Fashion, and Veva.[3] However, after the track listing had been announced, both JoJo and Willett were not included on the final cut for unknown reasons.[9]

No.TitleMusicLength
1."Our Summer"Dragonette4:20
2."H.E.R."Veva/Matthew Paul4:13
3."Body Work"Morgan Page, Tegan and Sara3:59
4."Go!" (Club Mix)Tones on Tail4:26
5."Friday Nights" (Jesse Andrews Remix)French Horn Rebellion, Viceroy5:30
6."Hey Daydreamer"Neil Halstead3:22
7."Alala"CSS3:58
8."Too Hot"Hey Willpower3:38
9."Wild"Royal Teeth4:33
10."Lighthouse"Hi Fashion5:45
11."Closer"Tegan and Sara3:29
12."Gay Best Friend"Heven' Helen Vergara2:42
13."True"Glacial Walls4:14
Total length:54:09

References

  1. "Vertical Entertainment Acquires 'G.B.F,' a Tale of Gay Best Friends and Their Role in Clique Warfare | Filmmakers, Film Industry, Film Festivals, Awards & Movie Reviews". Indiewire. October 26, 2012. Retrieved November 27, 2013.
  2. "Will You See This Movie?: First-Time Writer and 'Jawbreaker' Director Team for G.B.F., a Gay Best Friend Teen Comedy". Indiewire. October 26, 2012. Retrieved November 27, 2013.
  3. "G.B.F. - Gay Best Friend - a new feature-length comedy". Indiegogo. Retrieved November 27, 2013.
  4. Rich Juzwiak (December 18, 2013). "G.B.F. Was Rated R for Being Gay". Gawker.com. Archived from the original on December 20, 2013. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  5. "G.B.F. - G.B.F. NOVEMBERFEST Nov 7 OPENING NIGHT Chicago..." Facebook. Retrieved November 27, 2013.
  6. "GBF". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved March 19, 2020.
  7. "G.B.F." Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved April 12, 2015.
  8. "GBF Trailer - Available 11/22". YouTube. November 19, 2013. Retrieved November 27, 2013.
  9. Film Music Daily
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