FREE CHUBBY GAY VIDEOS MOVIE
I've generously given the movie a neutral 5. For some reason the resolution doesn't inspire hope so much as incredulity and relief that the credits should start rolling before long. True love and affirming self-esteem survive Bob's best efforts to kill them off. And yet as is true in most fantasies and fairy tales, all is eventually & inexplicably resolved, more or less. "Real" people do not conform to stereotypes nor do they behave predictably, but stereotypes exist for a reason and too many characters in this movie behave in ways that seem unfathomable in the context of the story. He has an ongoing slightly amusing banter with his mother, but she is a two-dimensional character that contributes nothing useful to the story and, had her character been eliminated from the movie it would have moved things along at a better pace with no loss. Bob does not engender love or compassion and those who stick by him during his trials and tribulations must have very high pain thresholds. It might be explained as a consequence of all his insecurities, but why he has managed to keep any friends at all is inexplicable. Bob's self-deprecating humor is sometimes somewhat comedic, though often tedious, and his constant stream of self-loathing while keeping people at a safe distance must wear thin on those he knows. Why their friendship with him endures defies reason.
Bob is nothing like the other friends they have, shares none of their interests or enthusiasms and at times is caustically offensive to them. Still, exactly why they seem to have taken on the mission of befriending and encouraging Bob remains a mystery. I think their presence saved the movie for me. Two of his "fabulous" friends, Aidan and Chase, are indeed beautiful in appearance, funny and amazingly supportive.
Even more difficult to understand is how Bob managed to acquire & keep these fabulous friends or the two guys who appear to be romantically attracted to him. It's a little difficult to buy into Bob's party planning success with the few drab, low-key examples in the movie. As the synopsis states: Bob has "fabulous friends" and a "great job" as a supposedly much sought after party planner. Jason Alexander successfully engenders sympathy and compassion, both among his friends and those watching the movie.
I happened to re-watch Love! Valour! Compassion! the same day I watched this film and Jason Alexander plays a similar role, further complicated by being HIV positive. It's understandable that this burden has left him with a poor self-image, a suspicion of anyone who might appear attracted to him and a defensive, protective bitchiness to stave off any more rejection. Bob is a chubby, not overly attractive gay man who carries about all the acquired baggage of being gay in a straight world as well as feeling undeserving of love in the gay world.