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Dating Amber
Overlook Pick

Dating Amber

They have their secret.
71
User Score183 ratings
TMDB 7.116+20201h 32mEnglish
ComedyDramaRomance

Synopsis

Eddie and Amber decide to stage a relationship in order to stop everyone speculating about their sexuality. Eddie is keen to follow his dad into the military, while Amber dreams of moving to the liberal hub of London. The plan seems solid, but as their arrangement begins to fall apart, Eddie’s denial gets deeper as Amber realizes that a perilous future awaits her best friend unless she intervenes.

Director
David FreyneFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Atomic 803 production companies
Release
July 3, 2020Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 25
Fionn O'Shea
Fionn O'Shea
Eddie
Lola Petticrew
Lola Petticrew
Amber
Sharon Horgan
Sharon Horgan
Hannah
Barry Ward
Barry Ward
Ian
Simone Kirby
Simone Kirby
Jill
Evan O'Connor
Evan O'Connor
Jack
Ian O'Reilly
Ian O'Reilly
Kev
Emma Willis
Emma Willis
Tracey

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
SWITCH.
Feb 15, 2021

'Dating Amber' will tug those gay heartstrings and make you laugh along the way. It's a fabulous watch, offering a new voice in the ever-growing queer cinematic landscape. - Chris dos Santos Read Chris' full article... https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-dating-amber-gay-coming-of-age-film-shines-with-a-unique-spin-on-a-familiar-trope

CinemaSerf
Mar 28, 2022

This is quite a refreshingly clever coming-of age story with Fionn O'Shea ("Eddie") and Lola Petticrew ("Amber") as two gay teenagers who hit upon the perfect ploy to make sure they are left in peace by their classmates: they decide to date each other! Their cunning plan deceives all their mates and even engenders quite a bit of jealousy from some of his pals whilst giving them a perfect cover. He is a bit smitten with his quite hunky teacher; she wants to escape it all to go to London and be a punk. It's a touching little yarn, with two enjoyable performances from both as they come to terms with living and coming out (or not!) in a small Irish community very much un-used to things gay back in the mid 1990s. I haven't a religious bone in my body, so cannot testify to the accuracy of the representations David Freyne makes of the church, but the Catholic nun's sex education video is remarkably plausible (and bigoted). The writing and directing is uncomplicated. There is no bullying or oppressiveness which maybe doesn't lend too much to it's authenticity, but it does to it's charm. It isn't a gritty warts-and-all story of sexual evolution; it's a frequently comical story of two kids coming to terms with who they are and what they want from life. Like any of us knew at that age....

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