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SummaryAt his mother’s New Year’s Eve party Lucas, a young police officer, loses a letter no one was ever meant to read. Amid the backdrop of the suffocating family party, the search for the letter unlocks memories of a past he’s tried to forget: months earlier, while working undercover in a mall bathroom, Lucas arrested men by seducing them. But when h... Read More

Directed By:Carmen Emmi

Written By:Carmen Emmi

Plainclothes

Metascore
Generally Favorable
65
User score
Generally Favorable
7.7
My Score
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Metascore
Generally Favorable
77% Positive
10 Reviews
23% Mixed
3 Reviews
0% Negative
0 Reviews
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  • Negative Reviews
Oct 17, 2025
80
Empire
Carmen Emmi compellingly mines thriller tropes to capture the fraught experience of suppressed sexuality, but it's Lucas and Andrew’s heart-rending, beautifully performed love story that endures.
Sep 19, 2025
75
RogerEbert.com
Though some elements read forcedly wedged in for thematic potency, “Plainclothes” feels seductively alive when Lucas and Andrew are alone together—either under the warm lights of the movie theater, where their shadows betray them, or as their hands touch the other’s body inside a lonely greenhouse.
User score
Generally Favorable
85% Positive
11 Ratings
8% Mixed
1 Rating
8% Negative
1 Rating
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Jan 6, 2026
10
Sebgoesmeow
Probably one of the best films of 2025. The film had me gasping, crying, and laughing. Tom Blyth really is incredible, and his performance carries this film. Russell Tovey also does a great job as well. The film is both tragic and beautiful. Loved the cinematography of the film. Gave it a very unique style we don't see often from films. This is a must watch.
Nov 11, 2025
9
katezoe
Excellent performances by two leads. Heartrending exploration on not being who you are and the toll it takes on you and loved ones. Very sad film.
Jan 31, 2025
75
The Playlist
What truly elevates Plainclothes in this genre are the contributions from Tovey and Blyth.
Sep 18, 2025
70
The New York Times
While the writer-director Carmen Emmi’s evocative debut relies on a nostalgically textured aesthetic that sometimes seems to mask its thin narrative, the heat builds in unexpected ways, ultimately igniting through the quiet agony of living as someone you’re not.
Jan 31, 2025
70
The Hollywood Reporter
First-time writer-director Carmen Emmi’s aesthetically overworked use of low-grade video and distorted sound is intrusive, but very fine performances from Tom Blyth and Russell Tovey keep you glued to this sexy, sad, authentically gritty drama.
Feb 5, 2025
50
Collider
While parts of it are laudable, unfortunately, Emmi’s film feels underbaked, never truly elevating its story to generate the kind of deeper effect that similar thrillers have managed to elicit.
Oct 10, 2025
40
Little White Lies
Carmen Emmi’s fraught debut Plainclothes has the makings of a steamy, provocative thriller, but seems disinterested in meaningfully grappling with the implications of its premise.
See All 13 Critic Reviews
Sep 20, 2025
6
Brent_Marchant
The LGBTQ+ community has made remarkable strides in terms of acceptance over the past five decades, a far cry from the conditions that were in place years ago. However, despite this progress, community members from various personal backgrounds and those working in certain professions have struggled with their comfort levels when it comes to being open about themselves. They have been unable or unwilling to step forward to profess their true natures to a world that has steadily become more understanding (even if there’s still work to be done in this area, as has become painfully apparent of late). Such are the conditions faced by Lucas (Tom Blyth), an undercover cop assigned to arrest (some would say entrap) gay men who cruise public spaces (particularly restrooms) looking for sex partners, ultimately nailing them on counts of indecent exposure. There’s one problem with that, though: Lucas wrestles with his own attraction to men, a leaning that has made doing his job more personally challenging. He also struggles to cope with the pressures of remaining closeted in his less-than-accepting family, particularly his hypercritical, homophobic uncle (Gabe Fazio). The ante gets upped on all of this when, on the job, Lucas encounters a middle-aged man, Andrew (Russell Tovey), to whom he’s highly attracted. Andrew is something of a mystery man himself, giving off vague vibes about himself that keep Lucas at bay, despite the charged sexual energy between them, as well as the officer’s growing amorous feelings for the enigmatic stranger. The duo is ostensibly trapped at arm’s length in their own choices, but they must nevertheless contend with how to handle the undeniable attraction between them in the wake of personal and professional impediments that they’ve allowed to get in the way – and that, thanks to several ironic plot twists, end up complicating their respective lives even further. Despite the film’s seemingly plausible premise, however, the execution of this story leaves something to be desired, a problem attributable to a narrative and screenplay that could definitely use some work. For starters, the picture is set in the late 1990s, yet the paranoia level among the two leads comes across more like something out of the 1950s. Granted, circumstances in the LGBTQ+ community weren’t as conciliatory then as they are today, but, as a general rule, they weren’t as overwhelmingly confining as they’re depicted here. Then there are plot elements that simply don’t mesh as well as they might have. When the film’s big reveals surface, for instance, they’re often treated almost flippantly, as if they were being employed as insensitive comic relief instead of as dramatic turning points more in line with the overarching tone of the remainder of the story. And then there’s the release’s uneven pacing, marked by a dreadfully dull opening act that, thankfully, is somewhat made up for into the film’s admittedly better-handled second half. But, despite the steady improvement as the film progresses, there’s still plenty of material here that could stand some much-needed shoring up. As one of the year’s most anticipated LGBTQ+ releases, writer-director Carmen Emmi’s debut feature unfortunately comes across as a sizable disappointment, one that could have used a few more script revisions before being committed to film. When a director seeks to make a picture with a profound statement, it’s imperative that the material backs it up with a solid, factually grounded foundation befitting such an insightful observation and does so with eloquent, suitably fitting writing, both of which, sadly, come up lacking in this well-intentioned but ultimately flawed offering.
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  • Lorton Entertainment
  • Mini Productions
  • Page 1 Entertainment
  • Podwall Entertainment
Sep 19, 2025
1 h 35 m
Out on Film, Atlanta, US
• 2 Wins & 2 Nominations
FilmOut San Diego, US
• 2 Wins & 2 Nominations
Sundance Film Festival
• 1 Win & 2 Nominations
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