Love- Simon ›
As Simon himself narrates in the film’s final moments: “This is my life. And I’m not invisible anymore.” For millions of viewers, neither were they.
This is not to say the film shies away from pain. Simon’s fear—of being seen differently, of his “ordinary” life collapsing—is palpable. The film’s most devastating line arrives when he confesses, “I’m supposed to be the one who decides when and how and who knows, and for how long.” That loss of control, that suffocating weight of a secret you never asked to carry, is universal. Yet the film refuses to let that fear be the final word. Love- Simon
Of course, the film has its critics. Some argue its vision of coming out is too sanitized—a story for white, affluent, cisgender teens with accepting parents. The film’s suburban setting is almost aggressively safe. The "villain" of the piece is a bumbling straight boy, not systemic homophobia. These are valid critiques. Love, Simon does not speak for every queer experience. It speaks for one very specific, very lucky one. As Simon himself narrates in the film’s final
Based on Becky Albertalli’s novel Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda , the film tells the story of Simon Spier (Nick Robinson), a closeted high school senior in suburban Atlanta. On the surface, Simon is the embodiment of teen movie normalcy: a loving family, a tight-knit group of friends, and an almost painfully charming ordinary life. But beneath the surface hums a secret, shared only with an anonymous classmate known only as "Blue" through a series of achingly tender emails. Of course, the film has its critics
