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Drama

Tiger Orange

- Do We Stand Out or Do We Fit In?

In the small Central California town where they grew up, two estranged gay brothers struggle to reconnect after the recent death of their father.

Release Date : 2014-07-26

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company :

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles : Where We Belong

Cast

Mark Strano

Character Name : Chet

Original Name : Mark Strano

Gender : Male

Frankie Valenti

Character Name : Todd

Original Name : Frankie Valenti

Gender : Male

Darryl Stephens

Character Name : Scott

Original Name : Darryl Stephens

Gender : Male

Gregory Marcel

Character Name : Brandon

Original Name : Gregory Marcel

Gender : Male

Shaun Cozzens

Character Name : Kingston

Original Name : Shaun Cozzens

Gender : Male

Will McFadden

Character Name : Levi

Original Name : Will McFadden

Gender : Male

Vincent Duvall

Character Name : William Waters

Original Name : Vincent Duvall

Gender : Male

Tara Samuel

Character Name : Rachel

Original Name : Tara Samuel

Gender : Female

Loanne Bishop

Character Name : Ann

Original Name : Loanne Bishop

Gender : Female

David F. Park

Character Name : Officer John

Original Name : David F. Park

Gender : Male

John Gowans

Character Name : Mr. Farber

Original Name : John Gowans

Gender : Male

Ty Parker

Character Name : Chet (young)

Original Name : Ty Parker

Gender : Male

Adrian Delcan

Character Name : Todd (young)

Original Name : Adrian Delcan

Gender : Male

Reviews

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2024-05-27

Two brothers - both gay - grow up in a single parent household with their father. One - "Todd" (Frankie Valenti) moves away to live his gay life in the open. When their father dies, he returns to find his more reserved, stay-at-home brother "Chet" (Mark Strano) running their family hardware store. The film depicts their relationship - both current, and through flashbacks of their childhood, and endeavours to investigate what fuels their love/hate situation. Nothing at all new here, the performances are OK - the usual character stereotypes - and the ending is pretty much as expected. The production standards are quite high, and their is some interesting comment on attitudes and assumptions - but they might have been more interesting had this been set in the middle of Iowa rather than the far more liberally minded California. Gregory Marcel provides some welcome eye-candy, but otherwise this is all forgettable family reconciliation stuff with a gay theme.