"Giant Little Ones" is Behrman's first narrative feature since "Flower & Garnet," and it builds a similarly cumulative power, though in its early scenes, the film wasn't grabbing me. Something felt off about the teenage characters from the get-go—they all look a touch too photogenic and speak in language that. Darren Mann in "Giant Little Ones."Credit.

The film deals with that topic in a clever way. Giant Little Ones movie reviews & Metacritic score: Franky Winter (Josh Wiggins) and Ballas Kohl (Darren Mann) have been best friends since childhood. The modern "coming-of-age" story gets a nuanced and complex treatment in the Canadian film, "Giant Little Ones." Cynthia Flores reviews the new independent. 'Giant Little Ones' is a coming-out movie with one problem: No one actually comes out.

Giant Little Ones

But that doesn't mean it's much better than the movie it initially seems to be either. Longtime best buddies Franky and Ballas (Josh Wiggins and Darren Mann) do almost everything together, from biking to high. High school isn't easy, and high school movies have always tried to capture that uniquely uneasy feeling. Giant Little Ones also has a good grasp on the divide between generations. The film frames parent and child relationships in devastatingly realistic ways. Giant Little Ones, directed by Keith Behrman, explores new territory in the teenage "coming out" film genre and it's a refreshing, welcomed addition.

Trailer Giant Little Ones

Giant Little Ones

Giant Little Ones

How cinema paints the tone of teenage LGBTQ movies. Giant Little Ones is unapologetic about its optimism from the beginning. Review for the film " Giant Little Ones".

The film stars Kyle MacLachlan and Maria Bello as the parents of a teenage boy (Josh Wiggins), whose lives are upended after their son and a friend are involved in an incident after a party. The film was shot in Sault Ste. Toronto Film Review: 'Giant Little Ones'. The high-school coming-out subgenre gets a pleasing if familiar addition in this Canadian seriocomedy.