A Reunion (2014) – Gay Themed Movies


The Road to Reunion (With a Detour Through the Past)

 

 

 
Not every road trip movie is cheerful. Some hand you a co-pilot who knows you better than you’d like, and memories you’re not sure you’re ready to unpack. *A Reunion* (2014) is exactly that kind of film — light in tone, but bubbling with emotions under the surface.

Michael and Josh, two former college roommates, hit the road to attend their class reunion — but let’s be real, that’s just the excuse. The real destination? Everything they never said to each other when they should’ve. The humor is there — often crude and full of “remember when you whipped it out at that party” moments — but between the lines, this film is about longing, late confessions, and what it means to truly know someone.

Between the Lines: A Bromance With Strange Looks and Unspoken “What Ifs”

The film doesn’t nudge you with “look, there’s something going on here,” but if you’ve ever had a friend who was *just a little too close* — you’ll know exactly what’s up. There are those silences in the car, glances that last a second too long, a joke that crosses the line, and everyone just pretending it didn’t.

This isn’t a typical love story, but it definitely dances around one. In one scene, one of them honestly admits he’s never let anyone get that close before. And we’re watching, thinking — “oh man, just kiss him already… or at least don’t take him to visit your pregnant ex.”

And that’s the point: *A Reunion* isn’t about love happening. It’s about how maybe it already did — and you missed it, and now it stings.

Ghosts, Sticks, and High School Heroics

Somewhere in the middle of the film, out of nowhere, the two start imagining they’re being attacked by knife-wielding ghosts (yes, seriously), and they have exactly five minutes to get ready for battle. And suddenly there’s a whole strategy: you grab a rock, I grab a stick, you go in the cave, I’ll yell “poof poof!” while swinging at them.

It sounds like a random gag — but it’s actually the purest expression of their bond. They play like kids again, and in this imaginary scenario, one of them sacrifices himself to save the other. No hesitation.

That’s their whole dynamic: Michael acts cool and detached, Josh pretends nothing matters — but you can tell, clear as day, that they’d both dive into ghosts and demons for each other… as long as they don’t have to say *why*.

In the Cave, With No Audience, the Mask Drops

Toward the end, everything calms down. No more yelling, no more silliness — just the two of them, alone in a cave, wind outside, emotional storm inside.

Michael — the wild one, the chill guy, the “whatever man” type — suddenly breaks. Quietly, without drama, he admits he hasn’t felt that happy in years. That he stopped letting people in after college. That no one has ever gotten to him like Josh has. And that he’s come to terms with never being as happy as his friends. And yet — here they are, together, in that cave.

And as you’re watching, it hits you: this isn’t just a nostalgic moment. It’s a love confession — one that never got a yes or a no, just a “maybe” that showed up ten years too late.

But… the film never crosses the line. No kiss. No big twist. Just two men, one moment, and something that could’ve been. And somehow, that hurts more than all the dramas that chase a happy ending.

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