« Nathan Lee loved it: The Weeping Meadow and drowned worlds | Main | Smartie: Noah Baumbach on one impulse behind The Squid and the Whale »

September 23, 2005

B. Ruby polishes Brokeback Mountain: Cinema history thereafter has to arrange itself around it

"Every once in a while a film comes along that changes our perceptions so much that cinema history thereafter has to arrange itself around it," B. Ruby Rich asserts in the Guardian: "Think of Thelma and Louise or Chungking Express, Blow-Up or Orlando—all big films that taught us to look and think and swagger differently. Brokeback Mountain is just such a film. Even for audiences educated by a decade of the New Queer Cinema phenomenon... it's a shift in scope and tenor so profound as to signal a new era... Quite simply, despite the long careers of Derek Jarman, Gus Van Sant, John Waters, Gregg Araki, Todd Haynes, Patricia Rozema, or Ulrike Ottinger, there has never been a film by a brand-name director, packed with A-list Hollywood stars at the peak of their careers, that has taken an established conventional genre by the horns and wrestled it into a tale of homosexual love emotionally positioned to ensnare a general audience. With Brokeback Mountain, all bets are off... With utter audacity, renowned director Ang Lee, aided and abetted by legendary novelist-screenwriters Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana and master storyteller Annie Proulx, have taken on the most sacred of all American genres, the western, and queered it... It's a great love story, pure and simple. And simultaneously the story of a great love that's broken and warped in the torture chamber of a society's intolerance and threats, an individual's fear and repression. In the end, Brokeback Mountain is a grand romantic tragedy, joining the ranks of great literature as much as great cinema." [Extensive choruses at the link.]

Posted by pride at September 23, 2005 05:32 PM

Comments

Post a comment

Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)


Remember me?