Movie review: ‘Violet Tendencies’
- Share via
Pity the poor “fruit fly.” That’s the term Violet ( Mindy Cohn), a straight woman whose social life revolves around gay men, uses to describe herself in the enjoyable if uneven sex comedy “Violet Tendencies.” So immersed has this plus-size 40-year-old become in the romantic, er, comings and goings of her tight circle of party-down gay pals that she finds herself at a dead end for any amorous satisfaction of her own.
At the urging of a noodle-brained co-worker (Kim Allen, funny), Violet decides to step away from her circle and find Mr. Right. But it’s a move that requires the kind of enormous changes at the last minute that might prove more than the free-spirited, staunchly gay-centric Violet can handle.
Though at times predictable and unconvincing, Violet’s valiant attempt to shift her longtime allegiances for a shot at hetero love provides the game Cohn (best known as Natalie on TV’s “The Facts of Life”) ample room to showcase her ace comic timing and warm charisma. It’s a generous, often lovely performance.
Playing Violet’s “Broken Hearts Club”-like circle of gay friends are director Casper Andreas and writer Jesse Archer, along with Samuel Whitten, Adrian Armas and Marcus Patrick. They supply a Gold’s Gym’s-worth of eye candy, but Andreas and Armand Anthony, as Violet’s all-wrong suitor, are weaker links in the acting chain.
“Violet Tendencies.” No MPAA rating. Running time: 1 hour, 41 minutes. At Laemmle’s Sunset 5, West Hollywood.
More to Read
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.