[personal profile] drscott
Thoughts on Brokeback Mountain continue to surface. The grafted-on McMurtry Texas schtick was pretty successful, even though Jake Gyllenhaal is too young and pretty to be convincing as a middle-aged family man. But in fleshing out the hints of his Texas life in the story, some of the ambiguity was lost.

It still disturbs me: in the story, one is never certain of what actually happened to Jack. Ennis talks to Jack's wife and concludes from the improbable story of his death that he was actually set upon and killed, as he half-expects from an early traumatic experience (when his father makes him view the body of the neighbor who's been beaten to death (possibly by Ennis' dad) because of his homosexuality.) In the movie, the visual cues given by Jack's wife and the brief shot of Ennis' imagining make Jack's beating a fact to the audience, skewing the story's ambiguity towards Ennis' belief being factual.

The power of the story is that Ennis' prison is in his head. His fears kept him from pursuing his true happiness, but he accepts that as the price of survival. It's far from clear to the reader that he and Jack's fate would have been worse had Ennis had the courage to defy convention.

In my 5th and 6th grade years, I took summer enrichment school (a perk for the brightest kids to enjoy being together while studying advanced topics.) After my disastrous 7th grade year, when a ball-busting Common Studies (English and History) teacher flunked me because of my spotty attendance, I had to take remedial summer school, populated by the stupid and the incorrigible. It was surprisingly enjoyable -- I discovered that most of these kids, who in the normal course of events I would have avoided, were actually rather nice to me and adopted me as their pet brain. It was broadening to experience their coarse humor and rough tit-for-tat ethics. But I also got my clearest experience of the possible price of being identified as gay, during the daily school bus ride across town to summer school: a boy named Chrisman, who admitted to enjoying giving blow jobs, was constantly teased and harassed in the back of the bus. The guys made jokes about how he loved "Homo Milk" and occasionally held him down and tickled him until he cried; no doubt he suffered much worse abuse off the bus. I didn't ever want to be subjected to that kind of attention. And so the prison gets built.

Now by nature I'm not particularly macho or effeminate. But this kind of early life experience trained me to fit in, and so I became what I pretended to be, fairly butch in manner and outlook. It would be interesting to know how I would have turned out growing up in the Bay Area of today, where young men adopt (unknowingly) gay fashions, use "gay" as a synonym for dorky with not much heat behind it, and join high school gay-straight alliances to meet cute girls.

Date: 2006-01-28 08:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] excessor.livejournal.com
The power of the story is that Ennis' prison is in his head. His fears kept him from pursuing his true happiness, but he accepts that as the price of survival. It's far from clear to the reader that he and Jack's fate would have been worse had Ennis had the courage to defy convention.

For me, the power of the story has three other aspects, in addition to the one you mention:
  • Gay men of a certain age remember the circumstances of how it was not so long ago. To compare our lives of today with the circumstances of where we came from is to remember the pain and fear we felt of coming out and the fallout from doing so.

  • We wonder what other prisons we might live in now, unknowingly or unwilling to see them. Could our lives be better than they are today?

  • Most of us have had the experience of loving someone and wanting him (or them) so strongly, but not being able to have what we want. Whether due to our own limitations or to circumstances beyond our control, many of us have experienced the emotional wrenching that Ennis did;in this sense, Jack's death—whether by car accident, bashing, AIDS, or cancer—resonates.


Even now, so long after the movie opened, when I hear the movie theme, the emotional tug is strong.

Date: 2006-01-28 11:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-scott.livejournal.com
The question is, how untrue to yourself should you be to conform to societal expectations? In rural zones in the third world today, life for everyone is constrained by those same narrow expectations of what is proper and what ones' duty is. There are milder forms of this still in play in our society, but much less opressively.

Date: 2006-01-29 01:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrdreamjeans.livejournal.com
I appreciate your thoughtful discourse. The movie has stayed with me for weeks. As I said in earlier posts, I know what that cowboy closet was all about ...It's taken me years .... a career in the theatre where I was first capable of being open and accessible ... and plenty of acting out in dangerous situations before throwing off the internalized homophobia.

The comment Curtis made about Ennis' prison being in his head is shatteringly on target.

Hugs to both of you.!

Date: 2006-01-28 09:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bigredpaul.livejournal.com
Are you coming to the dance tonight? Inquiring minds, and all that.

Date: 2006-01-28 11:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-scott.livejournal.com
I think we're punting because we've gone out every night for some reason or other all week. So we're just too tired to come up.

Date: 2006-01-28 10:08 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] apparentparadox
In the movie, the visual cues given by Jack's wife and the brief shot of Ennis' imagining make Jack's beating a fact to the audience, skewing the story's ambiguity towards Ennis' belief being factual.

Maybe, but there is still that ambiguity. I kind of got the feeling that the wife knew (or suspected) about Ennis & Jack, and so she tailored the response to make it like she was reciting a fantasy.

One of the other powerful parts of the story is the whole "you can't judge how deeply someone feels just by looking at how they act". Ennis' personality was such that he just accepted problems like he accepted storms -- you just survive them, you don't try to change them. One might think that Ennis didn't care as much, but I don't think that's the case. He just didn't show things to others. One can certainly argue whether that is good or bad, but it was a powerful way to show that sometimes, it just is.

Date: 2006-01-28 11:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-scott.livejournal.com
The movie also includes the daughter and lets Ennis looosen up a little in that last scene with her to let us know that he realizes that love should have been more important than fear. This detail makes it much more appealing to straight women, who can see it as a story of how men should let themselves feel more, a subject most of them can get behind!

No spoilers in my reply...

Date: 2006-01-28 10:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] billeyler.livejournal.com
Sometimes before I saw BBM on 12/22 and QUITE a bit since then, I've been scanning blogs and links to anything having to do with opinions on the movie. Some interesting comments even on the nude Heath Ledger link/blogs. What the movie seems to do for US gay men is open up the tides of memories of our earlier years and the various nuances of fear that we all must have had (except for a certain Los Angeles square dance caller who never knew he was gay until the very day that he came out at age 37).

I have had several co-workers (straight) come to me after seeing the movie and ask what it was like for me, since they know I WAS married to a woman for a brief time, then came out as homo. They know that I've been in a relationship with a man for nearly five years (with this one at least!) and their curiosity isn't offensive at all; more like they HAVE had their minds enhanced a bit more.

Re: No spoilers in my reply...

Date: 2006-01-28 11:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-scott.livejournal.com
The movie went into wider release and was #5 last week at the box office. That fact that's it's going to make a lot of money means not only is it eye-opening for empathetic straights, we'll probably see more of the same since one success begets the usual Hollywood project financing of simila r projects.

Re: No spoilers in my reply...

Date: 2006-01-30 02:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] abearius.livejournal.com
we'll probably see more of the same since one success begets the usual Hollywood project financing of simila r projects.


It's kind of a Capitalist way of accomplishing a Trotskyite slogan: "Seize the Media!"

Re: No spoilers in my reply...

Date: 2006-01-30 02:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] abearius.livejournal.com
Your story about your co-workers has made me very warm inside. :-)

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