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In one devastating, quiet scene, Jesse and Jason lie on a mattress, fully clothed, talking about nothing. The camera holds. No sex. No drama. Just two people who know they will miss each other. It is the most intimate moment in the film. I Want Your Love belongs to a specific subgenre of queer cinema: the elegy for pre-gentrification, pre-Internet gay domesticity. Like Andrew Haigh’s Weekend (2011) or Ira Sachs’ Keep the Lights On (2012), it captures a moment when gay identity was still defined by physical space—the house party, the shared bed, the dive bar. Jesse’s impending move to the Midwest feels less like a geographic shift than an erasure of self.

Watch it not for what it shows, but for what it holds. It holds time. And time, as Jesse learns, is the only thing we cannot fake.

I Want Your Love is not a film about sex. It is a film about the space between sex—the moments after, the days before, and the love that lingers in the silence when no one is performing. That is far more uncomfortable, and far more beautiful, than any explicit act.

Born from a 2010 short of the same name, Mathews’ feature expands the narrative of Jesse (Jesse Metzger), a gay man in his early thirties living in San Francisco. He is facing a quiet crisis: his financial situation forces him to move back to the Midwest, away from the chosen family and lovers who have defined his adult life. Over the course of a long, languid goodbye, he navigates lingering feelings for his ex, Fer (Matthew F. Rios), and a hesitant, undefined bond with his best friend, Jason (Keith McDonald). The first thing any discussion of I Want Your Love must address is its sexual frankness. The film contains unsimulated sex acts, most famously a prolonged, three-way scene between Jesse, Fer, and another man. But to label it "pornography" is to misunderstand its grammar. Where porn seeks climax (both narrative and physical), Mathews seeks duration. The sex is awkward, tender, logistical, and sometimes funny. There is negotiation ("Is this okay?"), there is fumbling, and there is the quiet, unglamorous reality of bodies in motion.

This is not erotic spectacle for a voyeur; it is behavioral realism. The camera doesn’t leer—it observes. By refusing to cut away or simulate, Mathews achieves the opposite of titillation: he normalizes the act. In doing so, he reveals how sex functions as conversation, as comfort, and sometimes as a desperate placeholder for words that won’t come. Strip away the explicit content, and I Want Your Love is one of the saddest films of its decade. San Francisco—post-Prop 8, post-gentrification, pre-marriage equality—is shot as a city of soft, gray light and empty streets. The Castro is not a party; it is a backdrop for economic anxiety and emotional drift.

In the landscape of queer cinema, there is a distinct line between films that observe gay life and films that inhabit it. Travis Mathews’ 2012 feature, I Want Your Love , doesn’t just cross that line—it dissolves it entirely. A decade after its controversial release, the film remains a radical, tender, and deeply melancholic artifact. It asks a question most sex scenes are afraid to pose: What happens to intimacy when the sex is over?