Jump to content

The Mostly Unfabulous Social Life of Ethan Green

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Mostly Unfabulous Social Life of Ethan Green is a syndicated comic strip drawn by Eric Orner. Appearing in lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender publications, the strip's title character is Ethan Green, a young gay man trying to balance his professional career as a personal assistant with his search for love. It was started in 1989[1] and ran for 15 years.[2]

In 2015, several years after retiring the strip, Orner published the compilation book The Completely Unfabulous Social Life of Ethan Green.[3]

Film adaptation

[edit]
The Mostly Unfabulous Social Life of Ethan Green
Directed byGeorge Bamber
Written byDavid Vernon
Starring
CinematographyJohn Ealer
Edited byPaul Coyne
Matt Deitrich
Music byRoy Firestone
Distributed byRegent Releasing (theatrical)
here! Films (international)
Release date
Running time
88 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

In 2005, George Bamber directed a film based on the comic strip, starring Daniel Letterle as Ethan Green, Meredith Baxter as his mother, Diego Serrano as his boyfriend Kyle, Shanola Hampton as his roommate Charlotte, Scott Atkinson as Chester Baer, and Joel Brooks and Richard Riehle as the Hat Sisters, an older gay couple in Ethan's circle of friends who are known for wearing outrageous hats. Roy Firestone wrote music for the film, including the title song "Don't Walk Away".

The film premiered on the film festival circuit in 2005 and enjoyed a limited theatrical release beginning June 16, 2006.

Plot

[edit]

Twenty-six-year-old Ethan lives with roommate Charlotte in a house owned by his ex-boyfriend Leo in West Hollywood. Ethan has been dating former pro baseball player-turned-autobiographer Kyle Underhill for several months, so when Leo announces he plans to sell the house, Ethan starts dropping hints to Kyle that they should live together. Inexplicably, when Kyle actually asks him to move in, Ethan breaks up with him.

Ethan hooks up with a younger man, Punch, who works in a real estate office. Together they conspire to delay the sale of Leo's house by convincing him to sign with the world's worst realtor, the terminally depressed Sunny Deal. However, Charlotte ends up sleeping with Sunny which knocks her out of her depression and motivates her to make the sale.

Meanwhile, after a nostalgic one-night stand, Ethan has decided he wants to get back together with Leo. Unfortunately, Leo has gotten engaged to a controlling and even emotionally abusive gay Republican Chester Baer and Ethan's event planner mother has agreed to plan their commitment ceremony.

In an odd moment, Leo, Punch and Kyle end up in a torrid threesome in Ethan's bedroom. Punch decides that Ethan isn't mature enough for him and dumps him. Kyle, who'd been considering taking Ethan back, abruptly changes his mind. Chester forgives Leo and they go ahead with their plans. The house sells, Charlotte and Sunny move in together and Ethan signs a lease at a local retirement community.

Ethan crashes the commitment ceremony but only to give Leo his silent blessing. However, at the altar, Leo has an anxiety attack and has to be taken away in an ambulance. A few days later Ethan settles in at the retirement community and the screen fades to black with the words "The End".

The screen then fades back up on Leo talking with a lady retiree. As Ethan stands nearby, Leo tells her that he gave Chester his ring back and broke up with him. Leo has realized that he still loves Ethan. He and Ethan reconcile and the film ends as they kiss.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Eric Orner: Bringing 'Ethan Green' to Life". Washingtonpost.com. 2006-08-11. Retrieved 2021-06-12.
  2. ^ Ryan Kost (2015-03-27). "25 years later, an Unfabulous comic strip holds up". Sfgate.com. Retrieved 2021-06-12.
  3. ^ "Rekindling the Mostly Unfabulous Social Life of Ethan Green | Xtra Magazine". Xtra Magazine. 2015-06-26. Retrieved 2023-09-25.
[edit]