| Brian
Cox, Paul Franklin Dano , Billy Kay , Bruce Altman, James Costa,
Tony Donnelly.
A teenaged boy in desperate need of
a father figure finds one in a place no one should ever have to
look in this controversial drama. Howie (Paul Franklin Dano) is
a 15-year-old who has been emotionally at sea ever since the death
of his mother in an auto accident several years before. Howie's
father Marty (Bruce Altman) is also having trouble dealing with
the loss, and distracts himself with empty sex while avoiding authorities
attempting to prosecute him for using unsafe materials in his building
contracting business. Howie falls in with a group of homeless delinquents
his own age, becoming especially close to streetwise Gary (Billy
Kay). In time, Howie begins to wonder if his feelings for Gary go
past ordinary friendship, but the issue of his sexuality is forced
into a very different light after Gary persuades Howie to join him
in robbing the home of middle-aged former Marine Big John Harrigan
(Brian Cox). It doesn't take long for Big John to track down the
culprits after Howie and Gary steal several guns from his house,
but Howie learns that Big John and Gary have met before -- Gary
sometimes works as a male prostitute, and Big John, whose tastes
run to boys in their early teens, is a regular customer. When Gary
runs away to California, Big John proposes that Howie work off their
debt by having sex with him; while Howie is hardly comfortable with
this arrangement, he has nowhere else to go after his father ends
up in jail, and he finds an unexpected degree of emotional support
in his relationship with the curiously compassionate pedophile,
who comes to understand just how badly Howie needs help. L.I.E.
(the title stands for "Long Island Expressway") premiered
at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival. |