Dr. Arthur Apsey
Dan Butler
Dr. Arthur Apsey

Frank (Miller) is a gay journalist who goes undercover at the urging of his therapist boyfriend Jonathan (Provenza) to write an exposé of Dr. Apsey (Butler). Apsey performs conversion therapy on gay male clients, a practice which Jonathan finds reprehensible. Frank quickly comes clean with Apsey but continues to meet with him under the pretense of interviewing him, but finds himself questioning himself, Jonathan and their six-year relationship.
Dr. Arthur Apsey
Dan Butler
Dr. Arthur Apsey
Frank Johnston
Andrew Elvis Miller
Frank Johnston
Dr. Jonathan Baldwin
Paul Provenza
Dr. Jonathan Baldwin
Shop Clerk
Andrew Gitzy
Shop Clerk
Shop Patron
Claudia Schneider
Shop Patron
Doorman
Perfecto
Doorman
Market Clerk
Ken Hanes
Market Clerk
Market Patron
Adam Hunt
Market Patron
Market Patron
Arlynn Wilson
Market Patron
Frank's Mother
Amy Kiehl
Frank's Mother
Frank's Father
Michael Selditch
Frank's Father
Laundry Patron
Shannon Carson
Laundry Patron
Does “Frank” need fixing? Well if he does, he’s not the only thing as this really far-fetched and contrived drama unfolds. He (Andrew Elvis Miller) is a patient of psychologist “Dr. Aspley” (Dan Butler) who is ostensibly trying to suggest that he can essentially talk his patient out of his homosexuality. What we quickly discover is that his boyfriend “Dr. Baldwin” (Paul Provenza) is a man out to wreck the career of his fellow physician and aspiring journalist “Frank” is the tool he intends to use to prove his assertions of professional malpractice. Now, aside from the interesting aspects of the nature/nurture debate that could have been advanced by this scenario of conflicted approaches to sexuality and associated clinical assessing, this film is poorly acted and written with some frankly hair-raisingly simplistic assertions made using a cinematic technique that was akin to “Frank” having a devil on each shoulder. I wouldn’t bother with this, sadly, it’s a solid idea but messily executed and has the look more of a low-budget soap than a poignant drama to it.
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