Is It Just Me?

Is It Just Me?

201094 min
5.5/10
DramaComedyRomance

Plot Summary

A socially shunned columnist finds his romantic match online, but messaging under the wrong account causes his sleazy roommate’s picture to be forwarded, creating an identity mix-up.

▶️Watch Now

Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (10)

Nicholas Downs

Nicholas Downs

Blaine

David Loren

David Loren

Xander

Adam Huss

Adam Huss

Cameron

Michelle Laurent

Michelle Laurent

Michelle

Bob Rumnock

Bob Rumnock

Bob

Bruce Gray

Bruce Gray

Ernie

Oskar Rodriguez

Oskar Rodriguez

GoGo Dancer #3

Keith Roenke

Keith Roenke

Barista

No Image

Jed Bernard

Pool Shark

No Image

Jeremiah Dupre

Bartender

🎬Crew

Director

J.C. Calciano

Writers

J.C. Calciano

Producers

J.C. Calciano, Michael Amato, Michael Amato, John McAveeney

🖼️Gallery (18 images)

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🏷️Keywords

roommatesbedroommistaken identitylgbtonline datingchat roomhookupcolumnistcommitment issuesgay themegay relationship

💬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

3/29/2025

What is it about American gay soaps that they almost always have to follow the same shy and retiring lad lives with sexually accomplished beefcake storyline? This time it’s “Blaine” (Nicholas Downs) who lives with the sex-machine that is “Cameron” (Adam Huss). They are good friends, but “Blaine” has an habit of overdoing it with the men in his life, scaring them off then returning to his flatmate for advice that is always the same. One day, “Cameron” is cruising using his pal’s laptop and the end product is that contact is made with “Xander” (David Loren) who chats with “Blaine” but thinks he looks like… Well, you’ve got the gist. Rather than just own up, though, he decides to try and play the date through and that sets us on a fairly obvious course of mistaken identity, lies, and pretty much everything else from the “Janet and John” book of contrived, implausible, rom-coms. It does manage to take a ping at those folks who order coffee that is extra hot and extra foamy and at the fickleness of the internet one night stand community, but in no way that is remotely original. The ending suggests someone told the director they were running out of file space, so it is compacted into a two or three minutes that really sums up this predictable and over-scripted cheese fest. They are all easy on the eye, it’s not a difficult film to watch, but I wouldn’t bother if I were you.

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