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2007

Posted: January 3rd, 2007, 5:02 pm
by m0zart1
[QUOTE=Koopa W.]

[QUOTE=Edward M]

Broke back mountain is a great movie! 

 

[/QUOTE]

Oooo...kayyyyyyy.

[/QUOTE]

My girlfriend at the time made me watch that movie, and after seeing it, I agree that it was a good movie.  I am not so insecure in my manhood to admit that.

 

It was just a very sad movie, and full of the usual silliness.  Like for instance, people caring what other people think when it comes to what they prefer to do in their own bedrooms to the point that they allow it to virtually ruin their chances at happiness.


2007

Posted: January 3rd, 2007, 7:55 pm
by feilong801

Well, it did contribute the "I can't quit you" (or "I wish I could quit you" or whatever it really was) line, which is now firmly in the public lexicon and will be spooked a million times.

 

-Rob


2007

Posted: January 3rd, 2007, 8:08 pm
by m0zart1

[QUOTE=feilong80]Well, it did contribute the "I can't quit you" (or "I wish I could quit you" or whatever it really was) line, which is now firmly in the public lexicon and will be spooked a million times.[/QUOTE]

 

When I was goign to see the film, I was a little bit nervous about who was going to be in there too and see me watching it.  Despite the fact that a girl was with me, I felt a good bit uncomfortable.

 

But it turned out that the theater was full of heterosexual couples.  I was glad I wasn't the only one goaded into seeing it.

 

When Jake Gyllenhall (sp) said that line, there was some real laughter throughout the theater.


2007

Posted: January 3rd, 2007, 8:13 pm
by feilong801
[QUOTE=feilong80]

Well, it did contribute the "I can't quit you" (or "I wish I could quit you" or whatever it really was) line, which is now firmly in the public lexicon and will be spooked a million times.

 

-Rob

[/QUOTE]

 

Of course I meant spoofed, not spooked. Man, there are times when message board posts make me question my overall mastery of english.

 

-Rob


2007

Posted: January 3rd, 2007, 11:32 pm
by Crevalle
I think it's a sad commentary on our society when the media praises the movie as "courageous" when it's about a man cheating on his wife with another man.

As John Stossel would say, GIVE ME A BREAK! Too many people [I]want[/I] to like the movie because, in some twisted way, they feel more trendy.

2007

Posted: January 4th, 2007, 12:29 am
by feilong801

Pac-man! Master Chief! Sega Dreamcast Rocks!

 

Okay, now that I've kept this in the realm of video games let me say this:

 

I agree on your point. The media just goes absolutely crazy over these dark, depressing films. I think every time I have tried to rent some "acclaimed" movie like "The Piano" or "Monster's Ball" in order to feel appropriately "artsy" (I did go to a liberal arts college, after all!), I end up despising it.

 

I don't mean to sound infantile, but give me Rocky Balboa chopping down that Russian anyday, please...

 

-Rob


2007

Posted: January 4th, 2007, 12:31 am
by m0zart1

[QUOTE=Crevalle]I think it's a sad commentary on our society when the media praises the movie as "courageous" when it's about a man cheating on his wife with another man.

As John Stossel would say, GIVE ME A BREAK! Too many people [I]want[/I] to like the movie because, in some twisted way, they feel more trendy. [/QUOTE]

I actually agree with you to a large extent.  The saddest moments in the movie were pity for Ennis' wife.

 

But there's still some sadness to the situation beyond just her.  Before Ennis was married, he was having a relationship with the other guy.  He wouldn't continue with it, not because he felt it was wrong or anything, but because he couldn't live with what other people would think.

 

He ended up marrying this girl thinking that he could fix the problem instead of feed it, but ended up practically destroying her life in the process.  In a lot of ways Ennis was a villain in the movie, and the film definitely doesn't try to hide that.  It paints him as a sort of a tragic figure in a Shakespearan sense.  At the end of the movie, when he sees his daughter has met a guy and is getting married, he contemplates the people he hurt on both sides of the fence, and the opportunities he's lost.  But he also realizes that it's far too late to do anything about them.

 

This is what gave the movie some credibility to me.  If it had been just a shameless justification of adultery, I would have written it off as soon as that became apparent.  It is a film that has many different levels of interpretation and understanding.  The main character in this movie, Ennis, is a victim only of himself, not really anyone else.  And many others were his victims as well.


2007

Posted: January 4th, 2007, 12:41 am
by m0zart1
[QUOTE=feilong80]I agree on your point. The media just goes absolutely crazy over these dark, depressing films. I think every time I have tried to rent some "acclaimed" movie like "The Piano" or "Monster's Ball" in order to feel appropriately "artsy" (I did go to a liberal arts college, after all!), I end up despising it.

 

I don't mean to sound infantile, but give me Rocky Balboa chopping down that Russian anyday, please... [/QUOTE]

 

I admit that I am more into artsy films than I am other types of movies.  I am sort of action-filmed-out in my old age I think.  I enjoyed "The Piano", "Monster's Ball", "The Magdalena Sisters", "Schindler's List", and my favorite movie of all time -- "Amadeus".


2007

Posted: January 4th, 2007, 3:18 am
by bluemonkey1

Haven't seen the film yet but is a man coming to turns with being gay still such a hot topic in the US?


2007

Posted: January 4th, 2007, 3:27 am
by m0zart1
[QUOTE=bluemonkey]

Haven't seen the film yet but is a man coming to turns with being gay still such a hot topic in the US?

[/QUOTE]

Well the film takes place in the 60s, and early 70s.  It certainly was a big issue then.