(2006, 99 min)
Country: U.S.
Director: Russell P. Marleau
Studio: Bigfoot Entertainment
SYNOPSIS:
An openly gay teen is faced with high school hell in The Curiosity of Chance, a queer
throwback to the John Hughes-styled comedies of the '80s.
REVIEW:
In The Curiosity of Chance, his feature film debut, writer/director Russell P. Marleau
pays homage to the '80s high school comedies of John Hughes and switches the perspective to that
of an openly gay teenager.
We follow Chance Marquis (Tad Hilgenbrink), a fashionable new student at an Americanized
European High School for army brats. He is instantly picked on by Brad (Maxim Maes), the
egomaniacal school bully, for wearing a bow tie and top hat on his first day. After joining the
newspaper, he befriends Twyla (Aldevina Da Silva) and Hank (Pieter Van Nieuwenhuyze), two
fellow outcasts. With their aid and a little advice from a drag performer named Claire Vuoyant
(Danny Calander), Chance may be able to overcome persecution from Brad, the vindictive and
highly unhygienic Vice Principal Smelker (Magali Uytterhaegen) and his own military-obsessed
father (Chris Mulkey). During all this, he finds time to experiment with female impersonation
and tries to win the heart of Levi (Brett Chukerman), the hunky blonde jock/musician next door.
Featuring a varied cast of fresh new faces and an ample soundtrack of pop hits from the '80s,
The Curiosity of Chance is out to charm and strike a nostalgic chord.
-- Robert O'Neill