Show the Player


Updating

L.I.E.

movies like this
CRITICAL ACCLAIM
LESSMORE
Any
TIME
ANYRECENT
Any

top fans

X
Register now to get news and recommendations filtered for your tastes.
Love this movie? Then rate it now and become a fan!
Something wrong with this clip?
Something not quite right?You need to be logged in to use this feature.Log-in now, or register for The Filter.
L.I.E. (2001)
Director
Genre Drama
Xbuy/download
choose from the following online stores...
Your rating
X
Register now to get news and recommendations filtered for your tastes.
Average rating 0%
Hi there! Rate this film and register to get personalised recommendations!

Related video

L.I.E. overview

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. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

News & Reviews

L.I.E. News & Reviews

"Featuring the performance of a lifetime from Cox, L.I.E fearlessly asks questions that other films don't dare to. Cuesta is a name to watch."
4 out of 54 out of 54 out of 54 out of 54 out of 5
03 February 2008
"His voice-over intones that, "there are the lanes going east, there are lanes going west, and there are lanes going straight to hell".It transpires that the kid Howie (Dano) recently lost his mother in a car accident on this notorious road and his father is too preoccupied with both a legal case against his building contracting company and with entertaining his new girlfriend to offer his son any emotional support. "
4 out of 54 out of 54 out of 54 out of 54 out of 5
27 November 2002
"Michael Cuesta, who cowrote and directed L. I. E., a drama set in the gray-skies suburban netherworld off the Long Island Expressway, has that gift for quiet lyrical disturbance. "
4 out of 54 out of 54 out of 54 out of 54 out of 5
"L. I. E. is about a boy who, in losing just about everything and everyone he has in the space of a single week, finds himself. "
3.5 out of 53.5 out of 53.5 out of 53.5 out of 53.5 out of 5
"An achievement of accomplished filmmaking and superb acting, L.I.E. puts you in the tough spot of unraveling how you feel about what you've viewed."
4.5 out of 54.5 out of 54.5 out of 54.5 out of 54.5 out of 5

comments

L.I.E. comments

There are no related comments yet