Robert Louis Stevenson's books are sacred, memories of childhoods past where boys conjured up lavish adventures with each other. Especially Treasure Island, written specifically upon a request from his stepson Lloyd Osbourne that there be "no girls in it." And there aren't, except for Jim Hawkins' mother.
His first starring role was in a 2003 remake of the children's classic Das Fliegende Klassenzimmer (The Flying Classroom), set in a boys' school. Only this one had girls -- and he gets a girlfriend.
In French for Beginners (2006), Goeske goes to France as part of a student exchange program. It looks like he has a gay subtext buddy-bond with Lennard Bertzbach, but actually they are partners in crime, dedicated to winning the Girl of His Dreams.
Grimm's Finest Fairy Tales: The Farmer's Daughter (2008). I'm not familiar with that particular fairy tale, but I imagine it involves Goeske kissing some girls.
Summertime Blues (2009), based on the juvenile novel by Julia Clarke: Goeske goes to the countryside with his mother, and meets the Girl of His Dreams.
Dornroschen (2009): The fairy tale of Sleeping Beauty. Guess who wakes her with a kiss?
More after the break










