What Happens Next

What Happens Next

2011100 min
4.7/10
DramaComedyRomance

Plot Summary

After rich businessman Paul Greco (popular daytime star Jon Lindstrom) retires early, his imperious sister Elise (two-time Emmy Award® nominee Wendie Malick) tries to get him to settle down with the woman of her choosing. But Paul seems more interested in developing his friendship with Andy (cutie Chris Murrah), a charming gay man he meets at a dog park.

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Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (28)

Jon Lindstrom

Jon Lindstrom

Paul

Chris Murrah

Chris Murrah

Andy

Natalia Cigliuti

Natalia Cigliuti

Roz

Darrin Baker

Darrin Baker

Harry

Michael Blaustein

Michael Blaustein

Robbie

David J. Bonner

David J. Bonner

Chip

Wendie Malick

Wendie Malick

Elise

Christina Broccolini

Christina Broccolini

Sam

No Image

Camille

Mrs. Grecco

Janet Carroll

Janet Carroll

Gloria

No Image

Rappin' 4-Tay

Driver (as Anthony Forte)

No Image

Bruce Campbell

Hot Park Guy

🎬Crew

Director

Jay Arnold

Writers

Jay Arnold, Thom Cardwell

🖼️Gallery (2 images)

What Happens Next backdrop 1
What Happens Next backdrop 2

🏷️Keywords

lgbtgay theme

💬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

4/16/2025

How come I never go for a walk in the park and meet an eligible CEO who is just about to sell his company? Well that’s what happens when the young “Andy” (Chris Murrah) is sitting on a bench with his dog and he is joined by “Paul” (Jon Lindstrom) who has just acquired his new pup and they duly bond over doggie stories. Over a period of time, they begin to get to know each other and we quickly establish the former is a gay lad whilst the latter is constantly being harangued by his sister “Elise” (Wendie Malick) to meet a nice lady. The more she pushes, the more he finds himself drawn to his new young friend but having been so dedicated on his business for his life so far, has he the faintest idea how the whole courting game works - boy or girl? It’s got the look of a television movie about it from start to finish, has some terribly cheesy dialogue and is about as predicable as the sun coming up in Jamaica - except possibly, for Malick who brings a little hutzpah to this otherwise routine drama. It does focus a little on age-gap politics, and on assumptions ill-informed people can jump to but sadly it does nothing particularly originally and leaves us with little of substance. Daytime fodder, sorry.

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