Director: Ang Lee Producer: Diana Ossana, James Schamus Stars:
Jake Gyllenhaal, Heath Ledger, Michelle Williams, Anne Hathaway, Randy
Quaid, Linda Cardellini, Anna Faris, Scott Michael Campbell, Kate Mara MPAA
Rating: R Year of
Release:
2005 Running Time : 134
minutes
A film review
by David Thomas
The first thing you're likely to hear about Brokeback
Mountain,
the new film from Ang Lee, is that it's about gay cowboys. Truthfully,
that's all the novelty it has to offer. Just the thought of screen
hunks Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal making out is a point of sale or
controversy, depending on your point of view. But once you get past the
hook, what emerges is a much more traditional, but no less affecting,
tragedy about two people who simply cannot have what they want.
Ennis Del Mar (Ledger) and Jack Twist (Gyllenhaal) meet while working
for Joe Aguirre (a menacing Randy Quaid), looking after sheep on the
eponymous mountain. Their friendship develops over fairly archetypal
lines. Ennis is the stoic one, Jack the mischievous one. Lee wisely
lets this develop naturally over time. Ultimately, though, in a burst
of passion, the two reveal what's been simmering since they first saw
each other.
Once Jack and Ennis return to their everyday worlds, an aching futility
creeps in. They separate and attempt to settle down and live "normal"
lives, meeting clandestinely on the mountain that brought them
together. But nothing will ever be the same for either man.
Lee brings his A-game, combining the romantic texture of Sense
and SensibilityandCrouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon with the awkward realism of
The
Ice Storm.
He doesn't shy away from the graphic lust these two have for each other
any more than he does the lush grandeur of the surroundings in which
their love blossoms. To the latter end, Rodrigo Prieto, a
cinematographer usually known for grittier fare such as 21
Grams, contributes some of the most gorgeous
images of Lee's oeuvre.
The performances are equally compelling. Anne Hathaway and Michelle
Williams give career-best turns as the wives of Jack and Ennis
respectively, suffering in their own ways through quietly disastrous
marriages. Gyllenhaal's contribution admirably overcomes increasingly
distracting make-up jobs that resemble a high school play's attempt at
aging a character.
Ledger gives the film's most complex, engrossing portrayal. Ennis
presents himself as a more conventional male stereotype than Jack, so
the tension between his John Wayne persona and his sexuality is all the
more demanding. Ledger favors nuance in depicting this struggle, with
powerful results.
The screenplay, adapted from the Annie Proulx short story by Diana
Ossana and Lonesome Dove
novelist Larry McMurtry, divides into two parts. The first is a nearly
self-contained encounter tale. The second follows the characters
through decades of betrayal and compromise. Though chronologically
disparate, these pieces fit together nicely through the writers'
choices, highlighting moments that reveal the growth not only of the
love affair, but of the characters themselves.
The love story depicted in Brokeback Mountain is
as traditional as that depicted in Casablanca,
Romeo
& Juliet, or Gone
with the Wind,
but instead of war, family rivalry, or the general bitchiness of one of
the characters getting in the way, societal prejudice is the culprit.
This is not to say that the film explicitly attempts to make some sort
of statement about gay rights or social injustice. If anything, the
film's unswerving focus on the relationship, treating it with the same
narrative respect reserved for Rhett and Scarlett or Harry and Sally,
is a statement in and of itself. That Lee, Ledger, and everyone else
involved are in top form elevates this film from mere gimmick to a work
of universal substance, earning its heartbreak every step of the
way.
Reviewed at the 2005 Toronto International Film Festival.