Life as a Spectator Sport

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Sunday, January 22, 2006

Brokeback Mountain

I just saw Brokeback for the second time, and it was almost like seeing a different movie. I've always recommended reading a book first before seeing a movie made from it, but with Brokeback I think I have to take back that advice. I spent so much of my first viewing noticing what was different from the printed story that I missed the story the movie was telling.

And it is a slightly different story. It has to be, because it's operating in a different universe. A written story can be open-ended, leaving the reader to fill in the gaps (to "spackle" it, as fan fiction writers would say). A written story engages more of the imagination than a visual one; a visual story has to be more explicit, or viewers wonder if they've missed something.

In the book, Ennis's suppressed violence is mentioned in a couple of places, hinted at in others. In the movie, we see it in all its ugliness. But we also clearly see its source--his complete inability to express emotion. The mumbled dialogue is a metaphor for Ennis's whole severely repressed personality. Jack's tenderness for Ennis is an elusive quality in the book. There's no question about his wish for them to build a life together. But one imagines that the permanence of a sexual partner might be almost as much a selling point for him as his feelings for Ennis. In the movie, Jack clearly loves Ennis. His words, his actions, portray a man driven by desire to find other men, driven by love to stay with Ennis even after Ennis makes it clear that they have no certain future together.

The movie tells a more sharply outlined story, a less subtle one, but it does so without losing the underlying message, that two young men powerfully drawn to each other had no words to describe their feelings and no context in which to live a life together. For them, tragically, the American promise of freedom was a myth.

Even more tragic than this powerful, but fictional, story is the fact that many people would like to make those failings of American society a reality for all of us.
posted by Liz @ 7:24 PM     |


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