Turn off the volume and just watch EATING OUT - then it'll be nearly parfait - maybe even downright Fabio. There are also a lot of 'jokes' and 'one liners' (a truly appalling one about being HIV positive) that don't contribute much.
It might be cute to occasionally say 'parfait' for 'perfect' and 'Fabio' for 'fabulous' but when every line contains something like this, it gets annoying. The fatuous dialogue turns the likable cast superficial. Characters speak in a "Clueless" slang that is both annoying and unreal. The film's biggest disappointment (and disservice) is it's idiotic dialogue.
The Comedy Central app has full episodes of your favorite show. The centerpiece of EATING OUT (the title has nothing to do with finding a good restaurant) is a phone sex scene that manages to be quite sexy despite it's extended length. Adam, Blake and Ders present their revised strongman show business proposal to Samson and Ram. After a few establishing shots of Tuscon, we forget the rest of the film is basically house-bound. The film manages to neatly hide it's low budget roots. The gal pals are a gay man's fantasia, however - as one character says "a reality show without the camera crew". It's young stars are hunky, sexy guys who look great on camera and turn in credible performances. But as Gwen starts putting the moves on her roommate's new boyfriend, and as Kyle becomes increasingly jealous of Caleb's time spent with Marc, and as Marc persists in laying the foundations for a long-term relationship with Caleb, it becomes a question of how long the deception can continue before something gives? - statmanjeffĮATING OUT is a good looking film. Kyle's plan: Get Caleb to date Marc so it'll bring Caleb closer to Gwen while putting himself (Kyle) in proximity with Marc (their true targets). Unfortunately for Kyle, Marc only has eyes for Caleb. He longs for Marc, a desirable hottie who's Gwen's gay roommate. Kyle quickly moves on the Caleb-is-gay campaign to benefit them, but his motives aren't entirely altruistic. She's only attracted to gay men while instantly dismissive of any straight guy approaching her, such as Caleb. He shortly thereafter falls for Gwen, whom he meets at a party, but she's got her own sexual frustrations going.
When Caleb's gay roommate Kyle reveals that quite a lot of straight woman bed with gay men (ostensibly to convert them), nice guy Caleb considers going gay to improve his unsatisfactory heterosexual sex life.