Entries tagged as Brokeback Mountain
Monday, March 6. 2006
Oh my god! Ang Lee reads my posts on Big Queer!
Okay, probably not. But in the spirit of giving credit where credit is due, it was nice to hear that after the conspiracy of silence regarding Brokeback Mountain and all things queer at the Globes, Mr. Lee actually referenced gay men and women in his Oscar acceptance speech. Of course I don't take back anything I said - the greatest allies of queer people in America's current political climate are and will be out, thinking, and active queer people - but it is still nice to be acknowledged. Besides, Ang Lee and the rest of the Brokeback crew whatever their sexualities were on the gay end of the prejudice stick last night. Not recognizing Brokeback Mountain as Best Picture was without question the result of homophobia, and while queers felt that sharp, sharp pain deep in our hearts in ways that perhaps they could not, I'm sure Ang & co. felt it to some degree, too. So thank you, Mr. Lee for the movie and your words from one small voice (with one big mouth) in cyberspace.
Tuesday, February 28. 2006
 Henry David Thoreau might well have been thinking of Ennis Del Mar and Jack Twist when he wrote that "the mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation." While the transcendentalist philosopher wrote long before Annie Proulx wrote the short story upon which Ang Lee based his film of "Brokeback Mountain," Thoreau is as relevant today as when "Walden" was published in 1854. Much of the focus of comment about the film – which in January 2006 won Golden Globe Awards from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association for best picture (drama) and best director – has been on the transgressive love story. But I think that if "Brokeback" speaks powerfully to gay and non-gay audiences alike, it is because the film articulates not only the tragedy of true love constrained and ultimately defeated by homophobia, but because it speaks to the tragedy of life not truly lived. In the conclusion to "Walden," Thoreau could well have been describing
the “Brokeback” Wyoming of the 1960s when he wrote, "The surface of the
earth is soft and impressible by the feet of men; and so with the paths
which the mind travels. How worn and dusty, then, must be the highways
of the world, how deep the ruts of tradition and conformity!"
Continue reading "From Brokeback Mountain to Walden Pond: Thoreau and the Authentic Life"
Thursday, February 23. 2006
 Sing with me now:
One love
One heart
Let’s get together and kill the queers
Come to Jamaica and get gay bashed.
Many of you might know how notoriously homophobic Jamaica is. The island outlaws homosexuality. If you are suspected of being queer you face jail time and violent crimes that sometimes end in murder.
On the upside, Jamaican officials have allowed the release of Brokeback Mountain in two movie theatres. You can read the Guardian’s report on this decision here.
On the downside, stories of murdered homosexuals abound.
June 2004, Brian Williamson, the island’s leading gay rights activist was murdered in his home, his body was mutilated with a knife and a crowd gathered outside the home celebrated Williamson’s death, shouting homophobic slogans, which are readily heard in Jamaican dancehall songs. One lyric by Beenie Man: “I'm dreaming of a new Jamaica, come to execute all the gays”
Between January 2004 and January 2005, “four LGBT people were murdered and more than 100 suffered physical and/or verbal abuse.” This is according to a 2005 press release from Amnesty International.
Continue reading "Come to Jamaica and Feel Harassed"
Monday, January 23. 2006
Because this post is in large part a reaction to this Times article (like the real Times in the UK), read this first: Golden Globe winners spark righteous anger So first let's talk irresponsible journalism, shall we? In the article, Chris Ayres makes a direct link between the "leftist" agenda of the current crop of films and the decline in Hollywood box office. Anybody who has had their flip-flop peel off on a sticky megaplex floor, has discovered Netflix, has figured out that it costs $16 to buy a DVD if you get it the week it's released, or just likes their homestyle $1 bag of popcorn more than the $6 movie theatre heart attack knows that this is just not the case. Take a look at this article from the New York Times (Summer Fading, Hollywood Sees Fizzle) and this one on the ABC News site that originally appeared in the Christian Science Monitor (No Happy Ending in 2005 for Hollywood). Movie ticket sales have been on a three to five year decline (depending who you ask and how they're interpreting the increase in ticket costs) and it has nothing to do with queer content. Mr. Ayres decision to reductively blame this industry wide phenomenon on Brokeback Mountain, Capote, TransAmerica, and The Hollywood Foreign Press Association belies one of two things: 1) he's a lazy hack or 2) he's a loser homophobe. Do you want to ask him which one it is? If so, send a letter asking the Times: letters@thetimes.co.uk.
Continue reading "I've Got a Secret"
Wednesday, January 18. 2006
What do you say? Apparently, nothing specific. Just a lot of highly general things about generalness being generally heart-warming and universal for the general population in a kind of general way.
Generally, speaking. To preface, I actually liked Brokeback Mountain a whole lot, a lot more than I thought I would (as you can read here). But when all the awards hype was starting - Golden Globe this! Oscar that! - I had some misgivings about the "favor" straight Hollywood was doing for queers (as you can read here). So while I am, on the one hand, happy as a pig in shit scoping out all the farmyard cocks at the four Globes Brokeback took home, I'm also a little peeved by the conspiracy of silence that seemed to envelope the Beverly Hilton. Was it completely and utterly impossible for a single person in that room to talk directly about Brokeback Mountain and use the word "gay?" The film was called everything from universal to controversial to a Western - all of which it of course is. But it is also gay. Not exclusively gay, not even primarily gay necessarily, but gay nonetheless. And considering the amount of straight animal husbandry shown in the montage clips and the amount of queer shenanigans that were well...not, the word, the subject, the very issues the movie was supposed to be bringing down were being held up onstage by Ang Lee, Diana Ossana, Larry McMurtry, Gustavo Santaolalla, Bernie Taupin, and Steve Carrell's wife Nancy (just kidding).
Continue reading "The Golden Globes: When I say "Brokeback," you say..."
Wednesday, January 11. 2006
 We tend to talk mostly about MEN on Big Queer, so here’s an effort to break that…
Not a lot of attention has been given to the WOMEN of Brokeback Mountain. Granted, the movie’s about the relationship between Jack and Ennis, but what strikes me about the lack of attention on the women is that so much of the talk about the men has to do with masculinity. You know, people (myself included) talk about how Ennis (Heath Ledger) represses his emotions to the point of living this double life, and they throw around words like manhood, masculinity, etc. But they don’t consider the other, crucial component to this—womanhood.
Continue reading "Brokeback Women"
Thursday, January 5. 2006
 Our best bud Heath didn’t play a gay man in Brokeback Mountain; he played my dad. After seeing the movie I suspected my dad might be gay—a rumor my sex-deprived mother liked to propel when I was impressionable. Then I realized it’s just that Ledger is playing stoic, concealing his emotions—just like dad. No fear; no pain; no love; actually the only emotion it’s okay for this kind of man to express is anger.
Continue reading "Heath Ledger Plays My Father!"
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