Brokeback Mountain
Feb. 26th, 2006 06:12 pmI know it's late, but in this backwater, Brokeback Mountain just premiered yesterday.
I think this movie can be summed up by three sentences: Wyoming is pretty. Jack is pretty. Ennis is dumb.
I can't point to any particular scenes or points that clenched it for me, but I liked it. There's a timelessness to it that makes it a story of star-crossed lovers, period, not particularly tied to any period of time or space except maybe the macho mythos of men-don't-cry and extrapolating from that, men-don't-have-any-emotions-except-anger (see: Men Are Dumb). It felt soft and quiet and real, and I walked out of the cinema with a sad smile.
(Also: this is the director of Hulk and the star of A Knight's Tale. Just for the transformations, Oscars for both of them, please :>)
In other news: a very happy belated birthday to
kiraboshi - sorry luv, completely slipped my mind :S
I think this movie can be summed up by three sentences: Wyoming is pretty. Jack is pretty. Ennis is dumb.
I can't point to any particular scenes or points that clenched it for me, but I liked it. There's a timelessness to it that makes it a story of star-crossed lovers, period, not particularly tied to any period of time or space except maybe the macho mythos of men-don't-cry and extrapolating from that, men-don't-have-any-emotions-except-anger (see: Men Are Dumb). It felt soft and quiet and real, and I walked out of the cinema with a sad smile.
(Also: this is the director of Hulk and the star of A Knight's Tale. Just for the transformations, Oscars for both of them, please :>)
In other news: a very happy belated birthday to
(no subject)
Date: 2006-02-28 05:14 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-02-28 10:55 pm (UTC)Geographically, Wyoming and Alberta are not even bordering each other.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-01 06:41 pm (UTC)Wyoming and Alberta don't border each other, but they both sit smack on the Rockies, which look fairly similar from Colorado north. Not identical, but similar; I suspect the degree of lushness depends a lot on whether you're sited on the rainier side of the mountain range or on the drier side.
(If you know an area really well, it's always amusing to watch a movie that's supposedly sited there - but is actually filmed somewhere else - and see the small ways the film gets things wrong. Most films that are supposedly set in the Great Plains, for instance, show scenery that is far too flat, because that's the image the general public has in their minds, but in fact large portions of the plains are rolling hills. What's your favorite example of wierd movie geography?)