Chad Allen and "Save Me"
Another Newsweek Article. This article is of interest to me because I did really like the movie End of the Spear. But I did find it also very interesting that they chose a politically active homosexual to play the lead. Later as I read the director’s comment on why he chose Chad Allen, I came to understand more about it and started to believe the decision was possibly good. Maybe the movie (or PR of the movie) would have been more effective with non-politically active homosexual lead, but also maybe there is a greater good here. And now after reading this article, perhaps there is.
Film: Gays, God and the Movies
Bruised in one encounter with evangelicals, gay actor Chad Allen gets a different reaction the second time around.
WEB EXCLUSIVE
By Samantha Henig
Feb. 6, 2007 – Normally a child actors biggest professional hurdle is finding roles once his voice breaks and acne hits. But Chad Allen, whose career took off at age 9 as Tommy on St. Elsewhere, had another obstacle to overcome: his sexuality.
When the openly gay Allen was cast as a Christian missionary in End of the Spear, a 2005 movie produced by an evangelical film company, members of the religious right fumed about the choice. But he has received a warmer response from evangelical Christians to his new film, Save Me, in which he plays Mark, a drug-addicted, promiscuous gay man who is sent by his disapproving brother to Genesis House, a live-in therapy program that aims to cure gay men of their brokenness, through Christianity. Mark does find God at Genesis House, but he also finds love. The film, which was recently shown at the Sundance Film Festival but does not yet have a distributor, tackles the controversial practice of ex-gay ministries. It chronicles Marks struggle to reconcile his newfound belief that living in the Lords image means being heterosexual, with his romantic feelings for Scott, a fellow Genesis House resident, played by Robert Gant of Queer as Folk.



