I almost certainly wouldn't have seen this movie if it hadn't been free. Nevertheless, I found it truly excellent. It's not by any means an all-time great, but it's hilarious, especially in the way it plays with stereotypes.
The main characters are Steven and Danny, a gay couple in Manhattan who have told their parents that they're running a catering business. In fact, they're mafia hit men, and they can't tell their parents, because the father of one of them works undercover for the FBI. That pair of parents comes for a surprise visit, and so they fabricate a dinner party, with the mafia family and other friends, to keep up the cover.
So much for plot. Who cares about the plot, really? The delicious thing about this movie is that the two gay men are violent hit men, very good at their job, while the don's two sons, who are married with children, live to cook and sew (and are miserable when their parents try to make them into something they're not). The stereotypes are there, but they're consciously intended and completely twisted. The verbal jokes (Who am I, the fairy godfather?
) are the icing on the cake.
This movie could have turned out crude and trite, but in spite of its stereotypes, the characters appear rounded and human. Perhaps the stereotypes are even the cause, as conflicting stereotypes combine in one character. When you've got a mafia thug who happens to be gay, you can't help but think of him as a person, because the stereotypes don't even pretend to fit. Overall, it is a surprisingly delicate and sensitive treatment of a conflicted topic and a powerful argument that homosexuals (and maybe hit men) are just people like anyone else.