The Toilers and the Wayfarers
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The Toilers and the Wayfarers | |
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Directed by | Keith Froelich |
Written by | Keith Froelich |
Produced by | Keith Froelich |
Cinematography | James Frank Tittle |
Edited by | Keith Froelich |
Music by | Chan Poling |
Distributed by | CMV Laservision |
Release date |
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Country | United States |
Languages | English German |
The Toilers and the Wayfarers is a 1997 LGBT-related dramatic film written and directed by Keith Froelich. It was released on 14 March 1997.
The film was both set in and filmed in New Ulm, located in Brown County of southern Minnesota.
Premise
Phillip and Dieter nearly suffocate hiding their gay sexual identity in the face of puritanical small town Midwestern U.S. values. Joined by a mysterious German relative, the three misfits escape to the big city searching for a place to belong.
The story is told from the pov of Dieter, a 16 years old german boy who lives in USA. Dieter's childhood friend, Phillip, is gay and has feelings for him. One day while having a play fight on the side of a creek, Phillip kisses Dieter. Dieter responds by being digusted and rans away, which makes Phillip leave town heartbroken. In the mean time Udo moves from Germany to USA to live with aunt Anna. Udo and Dieter become friends, to the dismay of Dieter's parents. Udo is shown to be a lazy and assholish bum, upsetting his aunt and the neighbours alike. When aunt Anna dies, Udo quits his job and buys a stolen car with the inherited money. Udo wants to take Dieter on a trip in his new car, but Dieter's father intervines. Mad at Udo and thinking that the two boys are too close, he forbids Dieter from seeing him and spanks the boy. Later, we see Dieter at Udo's house hiding from his conservative family. The two boys decide to embark on a trip to the big city, however as soon as they get there police takes notice of their car. Udo and Dieter end up on foot and decide to only speak english so as to not spark interest among city people. They manage to get another cheap car but it breaks down soon. The mechanic is a nice man who speaks german and takes a liking to the boys, as he wasn't allowed to speak his native language in school and as he has no children of his own. While in the city Dieter find Phillip in a cafe and realises how much he missed him. Phillip is happy to see his friend and shows Dieter the perks of a big town, together with the place where he lives. Dieter is shocked to find out that Phillip prostitutes himself to obtain money, even though Phillip seems content with this and even sugests to Dieter that he could try to as well and stay with him in the city. The boys spend days together and the old flame between them reappears, this time Dieter accepting his feelings for Phillip. Later we see Phillip sick and Dieter on the street searching for clients. Unbeknowst to him, a police officer offers him money in exchange for services and arrests him. At the police station, the leuitenant contacts Dieter's parents who do not want him home. Dieter risks being taken to juvenile prison. He uses his right for a phonecall to call Udo and warn him to leave the city before police forces find his address. Udo returns to the kind mechanic whom allows him to live with him and his wife until his life is sorted. Dieter tricks the officers into showing them the adress and manages to escape and return to Phillip. The two embrance and make love. On final, Dieter leaves Phillip, who is still sick, and flees to New York. While waiting for his train he meets a stranger who gives him advice to return to his motherland. The two play tables in the train station as the end credits roll.
Cast
- Matt Klemp as Dieter
- Ralf Schirg as Udo
- Andrew Woodhouse as Phillip
- Jerome Samuels as Helmut
- Joan Wheeler as Anna
- Michael Glen as Lt. Scallion
- Ralph Jacobus as Carl
- Douglas Blacks as Gym Coach / Man at Bus Depot
- Anthony C. Paul as Paul
- Johanna Stucki as Renate
- Alex Cole as Car Dealer
- Michael A. Sward as Gay Hustler
External links
- The Toilers and the Wayfarers at IMDb
- The Star Tribune, Lifestyles Section: "The Toilers and the Wayfarers" Archived August 14, 2014, at the Wayback Machine — article by Jeff Strickler (26 June 1997).
- 1997 films
- 1997 drama films
- 1997 LGBT-related films
- American teen LGBT-related films
- LGBT-related drama films
- LGBT in Minnesota
- Films set in Minnesota
- Films shot in Minnesota
- Films about male prostitution in the United States
- German-American culture in Minnesota
- 1990s German-language films
- German LGBT-related films
- New Ulm, Minnesota
- American black-and-white films
- American drama films
- 1990s English-language films
- 1990s American films
- 1990s German films
- LGBTQ-related drama film stubs