FILM REVIEW: Sequin In A Blue Room
Brian Butler is drawn in by Queer teenager Sequin and his coming of age journey
Brian Butler is drawn in by Queer teenager Sequin and his coming of age journey
Samuel Van Grinsen’s debut film is an exciting, high-octane coming-of-age drama about a Queer Australian teenager and his dangerous obsession with stranger sex encounters.
Sequin – his app display name – spends day and night on his mobile , being picked up by largely “ daddy “ types for anonymous, no holds barred sex in a whole series of apartments. Daytime the 16-year-old who lies about his age online, sits in literature classes discussing the meaning of love, while under his desk he scrolls through offers for encounters later.
He’s not a sex worker doing tricks for money – he’s just obsesssive about the need for sexual release. It all starts to go pear-shaped for him when a harsh and violent man “ B “ won’t let their first encounter be enough. At the same time Sequin discovers The Blue Room – a weekly group sex session in an apartment converted into a plastic sheeted partitioned off labyrinth , lit with a seductive blue lighting system.
Sequin, slightly incongruous in his shiny sequinned top, and towel , rejects older men’s advances and instead finds a young black visitor to the room – known only as “ F “ . They clearly have a chemistry which Sequin tries hard to renew by subsequently trying his best to find the mystery man.
But fatefully, he returns to the older man B , with dreadful violent results.
Will he find F , keep meeting older men or return the advances of a school-mate ? Watch the film to find out.
Conor Leach is mesmerising as Sequin with his sad-faced robotic love-making but overlaid when he’s happy with an impish smile. There are 2 secondary situations in the storyline – his relationship with his loving, over-trusting liberal-minded father ( Jeremy Lindsay Taylor ) and interestingly Sequin’s growing friendship with drag artist Virginia ( a nicely graduated performance by Anthony Brandon Wong ) .
It’s a film that speaks to a generation of young Queers whose sexual awakening is via social media. And it’s beautifully photographed.
It’s distributed by Peccadillo Pictures and is released on 9 April – see peccapics.com