Los Angeles Times

Dramedy a test of faith and patience

- — Gary Goldstein

The inept, painfully overlong “Brotherly Love” is a film so seemingly taken with its own endlessly campy, corny and clichéd self that, at nearly two hours, it contains maybe 30 minutes of flab. But even in a more condensed form, it would still be an unconvinci­ng eye-roller.

Writer-director-star Anthony J. Caruso, who isn’t fully up to any one of his tasks here, plays Vito Fortunato, an out gay seminarian preparing to become a brother in the Catholic Church. But with his penchant for partying, cruising and other “earthly” delights — plus meager reasoning for his calling to God — Vito is about the least likely candidate for celibacy. And he knows it.

So it’s no surprise that when Vito visits Austin, Texas, to spend a rejuvenati­ng summer working at a Catholic AIDS Care Center (where we never see him do any actual “work”), his faith, such as it is, will be tested by Gabe (Derek Babb), a cute, soulful landscaper smitten by Vito. Two guesses how it all ends up.

There’s nothing wrong with the film’s basic concept that a stronger script, cast and crew — and perhaps a few more bucks — couldn’t solve.

But the movie, based on the novel “Seventy Times Seven,” is so laden with hoary gay stereotype­s and references (enough with “The Golden Girls”!), anachronis­tic name-checks (Charo? Jeff Stryker?), groan-worthy silliness, overplayed emotion and amateurish crafting it never had a prayer.

“Brotherly Love.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 56 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Music Hall, Beverly Hills.

 ?? Breaking Glass Pictures ?? CHANCE McKEE, left, bonds with seminarian Anthony J. Caruso, also the film’s writer and director.
Breaking Glass Pictures CHANCE McKEE, left, bonds with seminarian Anthony J. Caruso, also the film’s writer and director.

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