The Falls (2012) Poster

(II) (2012)

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8/10
Lovely indie movie with two fantastic leads.
david-316516 March 2013
At the time of writing, "The Falls" has an IMDb rating of 5.6, which in my experience means the movie is barely worth a watch. Fortunately I ignored that score and had the pleasure to watch it last night. The two main characters are beautifully sweet. We get an insight into the strange world of the Mormons – two young men sent off on their mission to spread the word. It was interesting perspective, I wondered if many of the scenes of the missionaries being brushed off (as we all tend to do), were in fact real.

In any case, the main story is about the developing bond between the two young men, while trying to disguise the fact that one fancies the other a bit more than just a missionary brother.

Much of the soundtrack uses a slide guitar, which gave it a bit of a Brokeback Mountain feel. It does set the mood however, which I found lovely. I think the texture of the film perfectly captured that feeling of young romance.

There are some funny and wonderful scenes while the missionaries try to convert a down and out pot smoking honourably discharged war veteran.

The lead actors are very good and the pace of how things unfold means there is never a moment where you think the movie is slow. As the film drew to a close I did not want it to end. This is definitely one of the better gay themed movies I have seen recently.
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7/10
No Agendas, Just Humanity
nm49221977 April 2013
Thank God for indie films, all puns intended. The Falls is a sensitive, nuanced treatment of Mormonism, sexual orientation and the fierce battles between commitment to a greater cause and following one's own truth. The similarities between this religion's place in our society and the gay rights movement is the film's cleverest and most meaningful contribution. Utterly convincing, outstanding acting by Nick Ferrucci, Benjamin Farmer and especially Brian Allard as a lonely Gulf War vet. I wanted a little more background development for the two leads, and an abbreviated fight scene was jarringly awkward, but that didn't take away much from the movie and its messages. The Falls leaves you with something you won't soon forget.
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8/10
Heartfelt & moving
mcj60012 May 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I was moved by this heartfelt film. The dynamic between the two leads is well shown, and they both give very good performances.

The major theme of this movie (to my mind) is how people struggle between who they are and their religion (or at least their community's interpretation of religion). This movie depicts the Mormon community and how it responds to gays.

One thing I liked about the movie is the ending. I'm not going to say too much, except that I am tired (and aren't most of us) about the gay guy dying or losing out or something bad happening. The ending was skillfully done, realistic but somehow hopeful too.

This is definitely recommended.
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6/10
Young Mormons in love
bkoganbing27 November 2014
The Falls is a simple and bittersweet tale of two young men from the LDS church who are partnered in a mission. How could the higher ups of the church know that they were partnering two latently gay men trying to sexually define themselves. When the passion bursts forth it does is explode. It tends to that the longer you are in a closet.

Nick Ferucci and Benjamin Farmer are the two missionary elders who've been assigned to Oregon for their duration. One thing this film did not show is the fact that these missionaries don't necessarily do their two year hitch in the same place. You might be assigned Buffalo for six months, Brooklyn for another, and then finish up in Birmingham, United Kingdom. These two were lucky they had enough time to find themselves. And find an awakening sexual experience that was deeply satisfying.

I feel for these kids, they've lived a sheltered existence in a cocoon of a church. For Mormon Elders I always try to be nice to them making it clear I don't believe in their doctrine and I'm not trying to get in their pants. These young ones will eventually become the old ones who will get the timely revelations to change that doctrine. There was a scene where the two kids were invited to a person's house simply to be berated. I'd say the berator had more issues than these two latently gay young men did.

There was another scene where some redneck homophobe thought them being too affectionate and got a nice beat down for his troubles from Ferucci. He had reason to hate Mormons and gays in his mind. Our older Mormons starting with Mitt Romney forget that they were once a most persecuted people in the USA and world wide.

Lastly a free spirited friend they made played by Brian Allard after they've tasted of love gives them a taste of marijuana. Allard is a disabled veteran from Iraq and makes Ferucci and Farmer truly rethink a lot of paradigms they've been taught to accept.

Though Latter Days also about Mormons and homosexuality is a more widely known film, this one has a lot of merit and should be better known.
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The "Intense Buildup" we're given in this story of.....
arizona-philm-phan28 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
.....young men and their love for Jesus Christ, family, church (and, sometimes, each other) is near enthralling....and watchable again and again.

A "Realistic Primer" (in the film's beginning) of the daily lives of Young Couples (male, Mormon Companions) on a Mission. In this story, we're introduced to a dorm-like setting of a simple, unadorned double room, with basic kitchen. We watch as the Companions (always staying together, as a pair) are introduced to their new commitments and goals, their rules of conduct, and submission of required progress reports. Everything arranged for them....everything with a purpose.

(( NOTE: We learn, in the Special Features section of this DVD, that Writer/Director, Jon Garcia, was a neophyte (newbie) to things Mormon....and had to "study up" on his subject (unlike C. Jay Cox, the EX-Mormon and Director of 2003's "Latter Days". ))

OUR CAST OF ACTORS (only the primaries):

  • Actor Nick Ferrucci, as R. J. Smith. (I call him: "He Who Bringeth Out Joy"). Playing a young 20-year old Man on a Mission (2 years long), we follow him from film beginning to end. And at the start he informs us: "Mormon Faith truly is a benefactor of wholesomeness." BUT...the question later becomes: can R. J. stick to that belief? At any rate, here is a good time to point out that he is our Hug-Guy--some Accomplishments deserve one! And if there is any such thing as a "Light-Hearted" Mormon Missionary, R .J. often comes close. You'll recognize this later on as he backtalks his Companion, Chris, in an effort to get him to "lighten up" and into a better mood.


  • Actor Benjamin Farmer, as Chris Merril. (I call him: "He Who Maketh the First Move"). As R. J.s Mormon Companion, and Senior Elder, Chris has been on other missions (there, perhaps, is the rub). A sometimes fervent young man, Elder Chris is our Serious one. But, it won't take you long to realize that things have begun to rankle this Missionary. He's begun "to question".


  • Actor Brian Allard, as Rodney. (I call him: "He Who Enlightenth Our Lives"). Plays a pot-smoking, ex-Iraq war vet, with much of a PTSD personality (or maybe not....he could be our sanest character). Despite his truly horrible experience in that war zone, he will have you absolutely rolling off your seats laughing when he is at his best. He's lovable...he's understanding. And frankly, he could be the best thing which happens to our R. J. and Chris.


Despite all we learn about the Mormon Religion (and it's not always Christ-like), make no mistake about what I say next: ....THIS IS, AT ITS ROOT, A LOVE STORY BETWEEN TWO MEN. And so, as the story edges to its end, we find R. J. experiencing increasingly caring thoughts (and concerns) for his withdrawn Companion, Chris. Which then leads to a series of Notable Events:

  • A diner table discussion, between our Companions, of R. J.s concern over Chris slackening off....resulting in a surprise, Hand-Touching-Hand moment. Which then leads to:


  • An accusation of "Faggotry" against them....resulting in a fight by R. J. in protecting themselves. Which then leads to:


  • Bruised knuckles....resulting in Hand-Holding, in the applying of an ice pack (a nice little moment). Which then leads to:


  • Exhaustion and early drop off into sleep by Chris....leaving R. J. to prepare for bed, say his prayers and, then, to gaze at a sleeping Chris, before turning out the light. For me, this is THE point at which I knew Love existed between them. We can see it in R. J.s face....we can see it in his eyes. It is "The Defining Moment".


This film also contains an absolutely heart-rending denouement (outcome) scene between R. J. and his church Stake President. It is one of the strongest performances you will see by a young actor. While it will tear at your heart....it is NOT an apology scene and is extremely well written.....leaving us the possibility of hope for our two young men. Will the moments later Final Scene confirm that for us?

Memorable Moments: A Bus-ride Kiss. In fact, every kiss these actors bring to one another....seems real...seems meant. How rare!

PS--Production values are quite high for this Indie Film. Particular mention is deserved for the wonderful film score, music and lyrics. Made up of very simple piano, guitar and vocal harmonics, this score will absolutely grab you. A musical standout for me was the near film end "Coda of Discovery" (they are found out).

****
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6/10
...
glennk000024 June 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Well acted but similar plot to Latter Days. More glaring issues with the writer. A Mormon or ex-Mormon should have been asked to vet the story. Zone leaders and Mission President's assistants NEVER travel alone. Everyone, including tracting missionaries, travel in pairs of two. A missionary is not supposed to directly cause a fight, only to defend one's person or companion, drugs/alcohol? Are we kidding? The only story I've ever heard of missionaries using drugs or alcohol was against they knowledge (added to food items). If I were going to do anything not right by church rules as a missionary, you better believe the door would be locked and chained.
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10/10
From a gay Mormon's POV
giordankho13 August 2015
There has never been a movie that has resounded so perfectly as this one had. As I am writing this, I am currently a 16 year old boy and have undergone so much strife, pain, and heartache just from living, more than the average 16 year old should ever have. In "The Family: A Proclomation to the World" they clearly state over and over that marriage between man and woman is a sacred covenant ordained of God. This had to be the greatest cause of my lack of faith in the church, even though I was born and raised in it. The teachings of the evilness of homosexuality, a part of someone that is neither chosen nor even wanted in most cases, led me to think that there was something wrong with the church since I had to pretend to be someone I'm not all for the sake of not wanting to be looked at with disgust or shame. It is truly a hell to have to grow up trying hard to be someone else, that I don't even know who i really am anymore. Since I found out I was gay, and as everyone else around me started maturing, it grew increasingly harder to socialize to even the closest friends I had, since I was lying to them about such a huge, unforgettable part of me. As a result, it is because of this forced fake lifestyle, I believe it has caused me to be the socially awkward person I am today. I honestly believe that if I could have been honest with my parents and everyone around me and been encouraged to be who I am from the start, I would have been able to have developed better basic socialization skills as well as a better faith in a church that I grew up in. I'm sorry for the excessive length of this, but I had to express myself somehow, since I can't say this to my own mom. Thank you if you actually read this...
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7/10
No chemistry
uggieandme-6678616 June 2021
Ok there was zero chemistry between the two actors. They were both good actors and because of that they made the film more watchable. I did enjoy all three films but somehow they lacked the passion of two people in love. Which was too bad because the story line was darn good.
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9/10
A deft handling of controversy: sexuality vs religion
martyb-39 June 2013
"The Falls" had the potential to be exploitative and inflammatory, considering its dual subjects: Mormons and homosexuality. Thankfully, it is neither. Credit is due to writer and director Jon Garcia, who deftly navigates a minefield of controversy to create a moving story of one young missionary's personal journey. It is a journey that is admittedly hard to capture in under two hours, so this telling is, of a necessity, elliptical.

Mormons will view this film in a completely different light than non-Mormons, despite the director's care in trying not to offend potential audiences. A touching film about two missionaries is not the same thing as a film about two missionaries touching.

Garcia firmly believes that he has made the former: the story of a personal journey and finding love. A film that is respectful of the religion that makes that love fraught with difficulty. And indeed he has.

Nevertheless, many devout Mormons will see the latter: a profane, sacrilegious exploitation of one of the proudest products of the Church--its missionaries. Garcia, who took great pains to learn about the Church, even so far as taking the missionary lessons and attending services for months (with no pretense), may not fully appreciate one peculiarity about Mormons.

Ever since 1838, when Governor Lilburn W. Boggs of Missouri issued the infamous "Extermination Order" to shoot any Mormon within the state on sight, Latter-Day Saints have lived with a siege mentality: it's us against the world. (This was most recently evident in the campaign of Mitt Romney.) Mormons are suspicious of any outsider who tries to portray their faith. They seek to influence, control, and even orchestrate such portrayals in most cases to assure that they and their faith are not disparaged.

Missionaries are to devout Mormons what servicemen are to patriotic Americans: they are heroes beyond reproach, at least while they are serving. The Mormon discomfort with Garcia's film will stem not so much from the subject of homosexuality, which most Mormons are now aware exists among even their devoutest members, but the fact that a less-than-sacred portrait of the Church's missionaries has been painted for all the world to see.

The Mormons' problem with this film and Garcia's triumph are one and the same: the brutal honesty of the story. Missionaries are not all angels. And they are not all the self-assured messengers of the Gospel that they attempt to be, sometimes with great personal struggle. But Garcia exposes the weaknesses of his characters lovingly. He does not belittle them or shame them or parade them as evidence of Mormonism's failure.

I understand the Mormon discomfort and the belief that, while some missionaries struggle with their sexual feelings, to indulge them WHILE serving a mission is a disgrace, never mind what happens afterward. But I also understand Garcia's message that it takes a brave and self-assured person, missionary or no, to stand up to such a formidable force as one's faith and family combined, and say "I am not ashamed of who I am."
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5/10
remake of Latter Days
ksf-229 November 2021
Some confusion... this is the 91 minute film from 2012. There were also two 2 hour sequels released 2013 and 2016. On top of that, there's a brand new film from taiwan called the falls, releaed 2021. In this 2012 film, rj (nick ferrucci) is a mormon, and bunks up with chris (ben farmer) on his mission. The slow, agonizing telling of what the encounters are like when meeting with people in their homes. When they show affection for each other in a restaurant, a redneck picks a fight. Although rj has almost no bruises afterwards. Clearly, they have feelings for each other. And it leads to other things. That are strictly against the rules. This trilogy of films is similar to latter days, from 2003. Written and directed by jon garcia. Moves pretty slow. Except for smoking pot... someone starts giggling right after his first puff, which is pretty unusual. Harp music. The subject matter is interesting enough, but things take so long to happen. Could have told the story much more quickly.... this didn't need to be told over a five and a half hour trilogy. On another note, the guidelines of the mormon church are evolving; homosexuality used to be grounds for getting kicked out; now the church is more accepting, and one should consult the current guidelines for accurate information.
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9/10
Subtle and well-handled movie
snowyprecipice11 November 2013
Warning: Spoilers
The Falls caught me off guard. I didn't really know what to expect before watching the movie, but I am really glad I gave it a chance.

The summary is already above, but basically it's about two boys sent to do missionary work in the name of the Mormon church. The story starts with RJ (Nick Ferruci), and he meets Chris (Benjamin Farmer) later on. They are companions and carry out their "missions" in a pair, as they're supposed to, but during their months together they start to fall in love. We soon see them have doubts, and this is aided by a war veteran, Rodney.

I found both the lead actors really good. Some of the side characters weren't as compelling, but the two leads and Rodney were the most important, anyway.

The movie also handled the Mormonism (i.e. organized religion) and sexuality issues very well. When Chris first starts having doubts it makes him angry, but RJ calms him down by saying it's normal to have doubts. Strangely enough, Chris was the more forward one, but RJ ended up being the one who was stronger in his convictions. RJ's best scene was when he was talking about how he wasn't ashamed of who he was. It was nice that his family didn't reject him, either.

The ending was left for us to understand, and it left me with such a warm feeling!

**huge spoiler alert** So in one of their meetings with Rodney, he told them that he left home when he was 20, picked his brother up and they went around America for a few months, figuring themselves out before joining the army.

In the last scene we wonder if RJ and Chris have a future together (especially after Chris's seemingly negative reaction to being found out), but our doubts are allayed (especially by RJ's strong declaration of his feelings for Chris). If you notice, RJ looks at the envelope on his car seat. It's a letter addressed to him from Chris, and the camera lingers on Chris's address for a while. So what are we to make of it? Clearly, RJ is going to do with Chris what Rodney and his brother did. So tired of unhappy endings, so this was really refreshing. **spoiler end**

All in all, a great movie and I recommend it very much!
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1/10
To be 100% honest, this was nearly unwatchable.
JannetS2 April 2015
I know this is a low rating... But I really had no choice and honest is the best way.

Right off the bat, the low-budget became apparent by the sub-par visual and sound design. The sound was scratchy and echoey, mostly in interior locations and at times the actor's voices were not even audible. But visually, it just flat out ugly. The entire film had a thick layer of digital grain accompanied by blank white walls and out-of-focus close ups that made the entire picture look like it was shot by a 1st year cinematography student.

But then came the acting and writing, both of which left much to be desired as many of the actors were stiff and unrealistic when reading lines. Most of the dialog meandered and the actors just sort of kept talking, but about nothing interesting in particular. And then the characters and "story" came into play. The story was two men falling in love, and in the midst they... walk and talk... and, walk and talk some more for over an hour. Then visit a war vet and sit and talk for 20 minutes with him. A character who served nothing to the story what so ever other than provide the two weed and... stories. That's IT.

I didn't care for a single character in the whole movie. The two leads had zero chemistry with each other. I could tell that neither of them were actually gay because their kisses with each other felt forced and sometimes even straight up awkward. The part that shocked me the most was in the woods, after they had just got done peeing... They decide to blow each other.... So they literally blew each other RIGHT after peeing. The rest of the day they were talking around with pee/man gravy breath. Did no one see how unintentionally hilarious that was!?

I congratulate the filmmakers for making an entire feature. But still, this was an entire waste of time. I hope their next movie will be better.
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10/10
A truly wonderful love story for all to see...
media-422-2972965 November 2013
The Falls explores the Mormon Faith and it's relationship to gay love when two male missionaries develop feelings for one another.

The depth of research and the excellent acting by everyone involved makes this movie a "must buy" DVD.

The dialog was real for what is a very sensitive topic. I hope that people of the Mormon faith can see that special care and respect was taken towards their religion. However, the movie does point out the unnecessary conflict LGBT Mormons must go through.

Jon Garcia is an amazing talented director and I look forward to seeing more of his work in the future.
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9/10
An Independent Film (Trilogy) which is an Independent Film (Trilogy)
kevintilleremail10 May 2019
I've read other reviews of this film and I have to say, the negative reviews are trite. IT'S AN INDEPENDENT FILM! Production quality isn't on par with a multi-million dollar film, but the actors portraying these flawed people are believable. Isn't that what we actually look for in any film? I have watched all three of these, back-to-back more than once because I like crying and this story makes me cry. I really can't say which of the three I like the most since all three touch my heart, and I sincerely have cried during all three. I accidentally saw the first installment then got up, after going to bed, to watch the 3rd. I will watch them again, 1-2-3.
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correct
Kirpianuscus27 February 2024
I saw it as Greek Orthodox , knowing not verz much about mormons. I appreciated the honest dose of realism of storz , the acting, the well waz to define facts, traits of youth, a church , love. I appreciated, in same measure, the gentle aproach bz sensitive themes, from the traps of presumed felows of church to the emptiness of life in some occasions. And the smart manner to suggest the sensualitz.

The freshness, the correctness / two virtues of this film who is not pledge or accusation but onlz a sort of testimony about attraction, feelings, love.

Two zoung missionaries / elders - it sounds very eccentric for me the term for 20 years old guys - , their answers to challenges and their feelings one for other. A film remarkable for fair reflection of innocence.
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2/10
Um...
jmrmrogers27 October 2018
This was a class project melodrama that should never have been given the green light.
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8/10
Amazing ...considering the low budget
JJ-Chi27 March 2021
Very enjoyable, meaningful and interesting. Engaging from the very beginning. Sure, the acting could have been better ...along w/the production values (for which I'm deducting a couple stars). But considering this film was made on a shoestring, it still manages to impress and tell a wonderful story about love, humanity and struggle to find one's place in the world!
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10/10
A Love Story Full of Laughs, Profundity, and Pain
startlepoint23 March 2019
From beginning to end, THE FALLS is an engaging tale of two Mormon missionaries who discover something greater than they had expected.

The handsome and engaging RJ Smith, who is also the narrator, begins his journey as a novice, meeting his fellow elder Chris Merril with a humble and accommodating attitude, even agreeing to share in what would become a romantic ritual of consuming Lucky Charms.

As the story progresses, Chris becomes the more vulnerable figure, as the tenets of his "Latter Day Saints" faith start to falter, and RJ emerges as the stronger of the two as he lends his emotional support. The two personalities diverge more as their attraction grows stronger, but something keeps them together regardless.

All the years of indoctrination, telling them their feelings are "wrong" and "sinful," get capsized. There are moments of joy, introspection, great conversations with a traumatized Gulf War veteran who ends up converting them to his philosophy rather than the other way around, and lots of pain as one lover gets more paranoid while the other gets stronger in asserting his sexual identity.

By the end, THE FALLS offers both a quirky and touching romance, with actors who establish a genuine mutual chemistry, and a plot that challenges religious doctrine in favor of what Lord Alfred Douglas once called "the love that dare not speak its name."
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9/10
As unassuming as it is amazing
kinseydude6 April 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is unassuming and yet amazing film making. Two young men are companions together on their spiritual mission-work as Mormons, assigned to spend day and night together as they attempt to spread the Mormon faith, and several copies of The Book of Mormon, through the small-town Pacific northwest. Honestly, if one were not told this was a gay and lesbian film, their eventual relationship would come as an unheralded surprise, it's handled so subtly and sensitively. It follows their admittedly dull days as missionaries, lets a slow tenderness develop between them, and doesn't ruin any of its own surprises as their understated love develops. We only find out as they tell each other, almost halfway through the film, that their reticence and silence all along have cloaked same-sex affections within the not-at-all-accepting Church of Latter-day Saints. Their relationship is one of the subtlest gay love stories in modern queer film, their depicted lives are as as uneventful as actual afternoons of missionary-preaching would be, and neither man is any more articulate than you expect of repressed, closeted, anguished gay youth. One has to give this slowly building, lazily paced, ultimately unexpressive story its own time to unfold, without giving away any of its secrets. Once one appreciates that, even this movie's reticence can be seen to strike exactly the right note.

Other here have faulted the two leads for not showing chemistry with one another, but I think we look for chemistry in a screen-couple in heterosexist ways, and we get this couple's chemistry wrong in the same way people missed the chemistry between the leads in _Brokeback Mountain_. These men in their repressed environment couldn't _show_ open, chemical affection for one another. That mainstream audiences can't see it doesn't mean it isn't there among gay male couples. It means they're succeeding in hiding it, for the other, homophobic missionaries within the story, and even for audiences who aren't attuned to it as they watch the film. If you've never had to hide your own affection for a same-sex amour, perhaps you don't appreciate the lengths people go to to hide chemistry from others, and even to hide it from less perceptive viewers of this film.

Give this film a chance, and perhaps have more patience with its plodding development than you would with blockbusters, or even with more conventional gay and lesbian films. Its subtlety is actually its strongest suit. The wait for its eventual revelations is the sweetest part of this under-appreciated film.
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10/10
Excellent Actors - Excellent Story
gadbearr21 April 2015
This film caught me by surprise. I found it on Netflix and thought I would give it a try. I was very, very pleased. I had seen the movie "Latter Days" 2003 and enjoyed it also. The religion vs. coming out gay has been an issue for me in my life when I was younger and while I am not LDS I was brought up in a very strict Fundamentalist Baptist Church. The conflict of these two characters played so well by Nick Ferrucci and Benjamin Farmer was excellent. Writer/Director Jon Garcia brought this movie to life and I applaud him for such solid characters. I try to find positive and uplifting gay themed movies when ever I can and this movie was just that for me. I was very glad to see this movie has a continuation of the story in "The Falls: Testament of Love" 2013. I could watch these two men continue their lives and story even further if there could possibly be a third movie showing us even more. These are the types of characters the viewer can become very attached to and want to follow their lives.
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10/10
Superb!!!!
loricewalker6 August 2020
A very sensitive subject when dealing with the church but answers a lot of questions nonetheless. The two lead actors were stellar in their performances. I can't say enough of how these two lead the film. They really are likeable characters throughout and you won't be disappointed.

The cast overall were great as well especially the war veteran he was hilarious.

So give this a chance.

I'm glad I did.
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10/10
Must to watch! Don't fall for the ratings.
desperate_one26 August 2020
I never understand why this movie and its subseq ones have such low rating. Can it be the slow pace nature, may be....But its a romantic movie. Not action, sci fi one.

The movie despite being an indie has awesome awesome acting skills. Some scenes were really funny. And development of their characters slowly towards exploration of their urge was perfect.

I loved how their religious life dominates even when clearly knowing that it contradicts what they are doing. As a closeted gay Muslim (probably only other religion which shares same level animosity comparing to mormonism....btw they all do) I connected so much to this movie. It hurts...it raises hope....it makes me cry..

BTW among the trilogy 2nd one is probably my fav. I urge everyone to watch all three and demand a 4th installment.
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10/10
A NEW Life time fav!
wcjmartin715 June 2014
Thank-you! Thank-you! Thank-you!... Thank-you for expressing my life long discrimination, fears, battle and self-deprivation... as a "gay" with an inescapable and haunting Love for Jesus. I have tried, to get on in the "church" (missions/dedication) but have given up years ago; because I have never felt that I completely belonged/accepted; but neither to the heterosexual, or homosexual, world. The actors were so REAL/tender/vulnerable. The Director... omg, AMAZINGING!!! So sensitive, sincere, and must have come from his/her own reality... similar to my entire life : ( WELL DONE!!!! : ) Where are WE??? The lost and dejected gays with Faith? Please, I want to find "US"... I want to find "Me" : )
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9/10
Worth Watching
meaninglessbark7 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
The Falls is a well crafted intimate look at a young Mormon man becoming comfortable with his sexuality. Writer directer Jon Garcia for the most part lets the story develop quietly, skipping the hyper-dramatics a lesser skilled film maker would include.

The story isn't a surprise, you know where it's going to go just by the fact that The Falls is a queer film dealing with Mormon missionaries. But even though it's fairly obvious the two guys on the box cover will probably end up in bed together there is a realistic tension as the two main characters become friends. When they do eventually kiss it feels surprising and a bit dangerous.

The Falls approaches the subject of the LDS faith with surprising even handedness. It would be easy to mock or chastise a faith as anti-gay as the Mormons but Garcia (who reveals in a "making of" short that he has no connection to the LDS Church) doesn't put the Mormons on trial or have any other motive than exploring one young man's acceptance of himself.

The Falls is one of the better queer films I've came across. Well acted and shot it also has one of the most interesting soundtracks I've heard on any film in a long time.
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8/10
A good look at the LDS nad the treatment of Gay members
scottdiiorio3 March 2019
My Partner and fiance was Mormon for over 30 years, struggling with himself, trying not appease the cult that it is. Put aside the ridiculous founder Smith and his corruption, and you realize members were misguided.

THe harm the Mormon church has done to love is profound, and the movie series shows how men who love other men can over come the corruption and hate against love freeing themselves from tidings that pay a church for hatred.

He is loved now, genuinely not stuck in a marriage of image, and to appease the corrupt. Shifting the real love to genuine compassion to help all people, not those consumed by ego that have fallen from any hope of any grace by hating love.

I plan to play all 3 movies for him, and know it will trigger emotions, tears, and I will be their beside him, making him realize he has real love and freedom now, and the cult is gone, and his letter to them, as well as Oaks being blunt about the Mormon corruption is sent. The Mormon church will either have a new and kind fair revelation with the newer members, or it will fade as a cult .
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