The big gay musical movie

The Big Gay Musical

Chad Watkins

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Authentic and Affirming I rented the Big Gay Musical based on its high reviews. Boy, am I joyful that I did! From the looks of the cover or poster, the film seemed superficial to me. Shirtless men in wings? However, I believed that the movie started strong and triumphantly finished with relevant and positive messages for everyone, especially those who struggle with their own or someone else's sexuality. Differing views of dating were expressed. HIV/AIDS was also highlighted in the film. I felt that some of the music was hokey but that thought did not stop me from having purchased the soundtrack. The song, As I Am, stood out from the rest of the selections for me. It made me cry!

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Jordan Knox

Such a wonderful, uplifting production with a great message.

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Alexandre Pageau

Supert bon

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WATCH IT! "The Big Gay Musical": Movie Review

“The Massive Gay Musical”: A Big Gay Thrill!

     In “The Large Gay Musical”, the film’s creators Casper Andreas (“Between Love & Goodbye”, “A Four Letter Word”) and Fred M. Caruso indulge gay men’s love of showtunes and camp in a big way… but you may have guessed that by the film’s title already!  Alongside the amusement stuff, however, Andreas and Caruso also make a statement about some very real issues facing gay guys in 2009– Manhunt, HIV testing, internet sex hookups versus “traditional dating”, and more. The finding is a feature that’s not only high-spirited and amusing, but also provocative and, at times, (dare I say?!) very sweet.

     When “The Giant Gay Musical” starts, we meet our two leads, Paul (Daniel Robinson) and Eddie (Joey Dudding). They are actors in a new musical comedy called “Adam and Steve: Just The Way God Made ‘Em!”– and it’s the real story about what happened in the Garden of Eden. “Adam and Steve” mirthfully explores the origins of homophobia,

The Rectangular View

The Great Gay Musical is about two manage actors in the Off-Broadway gay musical, Adam and Steve: Just the Way God Made ‘Em. The film has two stories, one on stage and the other off. Sadly, neither is very interesting.

The film is about the two leads, Paul (Daniel Robinson) and Eddie (Joey Dudding). Paul thinks he’s in a loving relationship until his boyfriend suddenly ghosts him after hearing a rumor that Paul had AIDS. Paul gets tested to demonstrate that the rumor is false, but his now ex-boyfriend still won’t come back his calls. Distraught and hurt, Paul starts dating again, but finds that men only need sex, so he decides he’s going to do the same.

Eddie is a virgin who is not out to his deeply religious parents. The cast discovers that he’s never had sex and takes him out, where Eddie gets drunk and goes place with a stranger. The guy convinces Eddie to own unprotected sex. Since Eddie thinks they’re going to be boyfriends, he goes along.

While all this is going on, we become snippets of the musical, which has some snappy numbers and dance routines. The play is about how God made Adam and Eve, then had to banish them

Review for The Big Lgbtq+ Musical


Casper Andreas and Fred M. Caruso have produced an entertaining movie. Regardless of your sexual orientation, The Big Same-sex attracted Musicalwill tickle your rib bones and have you rolling around the floor in hysterics. The story revolves around the Off-Broadway show 'Adam and Steve'. The wonderful thing about this: it subverts the whole Genesis syndrome by joining two homosexual men together (via the magic of God). These 'lovers' confront televangelists, tap-dancing angels and a camp that attempts to turn 'gays' straight. There is also an external story that ties the musical together. Paul (who plays Adam) and Eddie (who plays Steve) end up experiencing the same things as their on-stage counterparts and use the exhibit to empower themselves. It is a genuinely funny subversion on par with a classic South Parkepisode. It also contains unpretentious moral messages - sex without love is meaningless, look after your friends, have values and be happy. The film is also about identity, knowing who you are and not trying to be anybody different other than yourself (what other communication would God give us?). The musical numbers are a breath of fresh air - th