Nonton Film: 641934 am i ok 2024 Sub Indo

Am I OK? (2024)
Overview: Lucy and Jane have been best friends for most of their lives and think they know everything there is to know about each other. But when Jane announces she's moving to London Lucy reveals a long-held secret. As Jane tries to help Lucy their friendship is thrown into chaos.
Director: Stephanie Allynne
Cast: Dakota Johnson, Sonoya Mizuno, Jermaine Fowler, Kiersey Clemons, Molly Gordon
Original Language: EN
Original Title: Am I OK?
Budget: N/A
Revenue: N/A
MPAA Rating: PG
Keywords: coming out, friendship, female friendship, lgbt, woman director, reflective, lesbian, relaxed
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Brent Marchant (June 9, 2024)
Coming out isnât always an easy process, especially for anyone who has lingering doubts about his or her sexual orientation. However, given the prevailing conditions present in contemporary society, this gay comedy-drama from directors Stephanie Allynne and Tig Nataro stretches credibility where that notion is concerned. Thirty-two-year-old Angelino Lucy (Dakota Johnson) canât figure herself out sexually speaking. Sheâs not particularly interested in men, as her sometimes-male companion, Ben (Whitmer Thomas), finds out, but sheâs not sure if sheâs genuinely attracted to women. She spends considerable time with her bestie, Jane (Sonoya Mizuno), a straight woman whom sheâs known for years but who is also about to relocate from Los Angeles to London for work, a development about which Lucy has mixed feelings. So, when Lucy at last opens up to Jane about her possible lesbian leanings, she does all she can to get her friend a date before she leaves for England. But, somewhat perplexingly, Lucy hesitates at every turn, fearful of what might transpire. And therein lies the problem with this film â itâs just not believable. If this picture were made (or set) 40 years ago, when social acceptance of alternative lifestyles was more problematic, then it would probably come across as more plausible. But, given current conditions, itâs simply not convincing. If Lucy were to live in an isolated conservative small town, it might be more conceivable, but she lives in Los Angeles, for goodness sake, where alternative sexuality is virtually a prerequisite for residency. Lucyâs exaggerated whining about her reluctance to move forward grows tiresome, too, and itâs easy to see why Jane loses patience with her. Thatâs a problem compounded by Johnsonâs underwhelming performance, which is annoying and anything but persuasive. The scriptâs humor is fairly thin, too, save for the laughs generated in cameo appearances by LGBTQ+ icons like Sean Hayes and Nataro, who delivers a positively hilarious performance as a deadpan New Age retreat facilitator. But the film genuinely could use more of these edgy narrative elements (along with greater overall believability) to succeed as a viable release. In fact, given Nataroâs reputation as a source of outrageously sidesplitting comedy, this project is surprisingly tame and inherently more conventional than what one would expect out of someone so innately talented. The pictureâs aptly timed streaming release for Pride Month isnât at all unexpected, but itâs genuinely unfortunate that this just isnât a very good movie. Gay cinema has come a long way in recent decades, but this offering feels like an anachronistic throwback to the early days of the genre. Weâve seen stories much like this before, but the LGBTQ+ community deserves something more inventive â and better overall â at this point.