Each relationship has it’s own strain, struggle and climax. And there’s Will’s newly ex-boyfriend Max, the first man Will has been serious with, who he is navigating his ending with. There’s Will’s best friend Angie, a dyke who is fickle in her romantic relationships but always loyal to him. At the foreground is his very close relationship with his mother, often shown in scenes in the apartment where she raised Will on her own. Will’s story is the story of him coming out, coming of age and into his own identity - and is told primarily through his relationships. As such, it’s casual, at times intense, and somewhat rambling. It’s a bit like having a long get-to-know-you conversation at a dinner party that moves to a bar, and continues over brunch the next weekend, resuming again when you run into each other on a Plateau street. The Geography of Pluto is Will Ambrose’s story, told in the present and, in turns, memory. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
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