Tag Archive | "Brokeback Mountain"

Letters to the Editor – October 27, 2011

Tags: , , ,


In response to the snowbiz column “A return to Brokeback Mountain” in the Florida Agenda, October 13, 2011.

DEAR EDITOR,

I so loved that movie… It soaked into my soul. I loved Jake, I loved Heath and their acting was excellent. I have so hoped a BBM#2 would have been made. I’m sure a great script could have been written.
Thank you for not forgetting the movie… It lives in people’s hearts and souls.

Sincerely,
Susan Briggs

In response to the Opinion “Why Give Obama a Second Chance?” in the Florida Agenda, September 22, 2011.

DEAR EDITOR,

I just finished reading David Stack’s piece. It was honestly awesome to read. It was well thought out and very well stated. I agree with 99.99% of it. We do need to get back to fundamentals and to me that means first, foremost and number 1 – getting rid of the Federal Reserve (we can print and fund our own money – we don’t need to borrow from them only to have to pay them back double for it!), we need to make corporate lobbying illegal and to any politician that takes that money – punishable by death!

We need all our regulations back and then some. We truly need to get lawyers out of politics and all laws need to be applicable to all or no one and easily understood by all! I agree there isn’t a republican out there that will get this job done for us, but I just don’t believe Barack Obama will either, I just don’t. The guy that can get that done for us is the guy I want to elect in! I hate having to elect “the lesser of two evils!” A previous comment stated. “Stack’s piece paints the broader picture that it is not just about our disappointment but about what will happen if he loses this election to Romney or Perry.” Barack Obama will only be the lesser of two evils!

Sincerely

James S Capone

Snowbiz A Return to Brokeback Mountain

Tags: , , , , , , , ,


By NICHOLAS SNOW

 

I don’t believe any of us covering the red carpet arrivals for the Brokeback Mountain premiere in Hollywood, November 11, 2005, had a clue that we would truly be a part of history, helping launch a movie that would transform
the lives of countless people around the world because of its profound capturing of the cost of the closet. I had not yet seen the movie that I now hold as one of the most important ever made, conveying the deep, undeniable humanity of authentic love, as well as the justifications and costs of locking that love in the dark.

For the record, the late Heath Ledger was not at the premiere. He was in New York with Michelle Williams who was in the last stages of her pregnancy. I don’t recall that Anne Hathaway was in attendance either. You might find it interesting to note that the film achieved the sort of Triple Crown rarely seen in Hollywood – the author of the original story, the screenwriters and the director all agreed that what ended up on the screen is precisely what they had envisioned.

I’m not sure how Brokeback Mountain screenwriters Diana Ossana (Johnson County War, Dead Man’s Walk) – a producer on the film – and Pulitzer Prize winner Larry McMurtry (Terms of Endearment, The Last Picture Show) – an executive producer on the film – met the story’s author, Annie Proulx, but they did. Proulx trusted the duo and the rest his history. Many on Hollywood’s hot lists wanted to participate in the film.

“When we put it out into the world, five days later Gus Van Sant showed up at our door,” explained Ossana. About the continuing development process and the ultimate choice of Ang Lee to direct, Ossana explained that both Brokeback Mountain and Lee’s Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon have in common two very key elements – they are very intimate stories that take place on vast landscapes.

Was Brokeback Mountain an easy sell for the screenwriters? No. “A lot of people expressed trepidation about it,” explained Ossana. “When I first mentioned it to our representatives in 1997, they asked me what it was about and I told them and they said, ‘Are you out of your mind?’ And I said, ‘No. Read the story, and then you’ll see I’m not out of my mind.’ As soon as they read the story, they said, ‘Great. We should do this.’”

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Annie Proulx, who wrote the short story the film was based on, explained, “…I have had hundreds of letters over the eight years since the story was written from men who said, ‘This is my story. You’ve told my life.’ From other men who have said, ‘This is why I left Wyoming.’ And most particularly moving from fathers who’ve said, ‘Now I know the hell my son went through.’”


“It’s a great piece of American literature,” said Ang Lee about Annie
Proulx’s original short story, Brokeback Mountain. “It’s only 30 pages long but it wrenched my guts. It’s very far away from me but it really touched me. I just love the story and I have to do it. I can’t put that out of my mind.”
Lee was very happy with his leading men, Jake and Heath. “Oh, they’re wonderful,” said Lee. “It’s scary to think how young and good they are. They’re totally pro.” Did the hunky stars have reservations about doing the love scenes? “No.  They’re like, ‘tell me what to do to get into the movie,’” explained Lee.  “They’re good actors. They want to do good roles.”

In a red carpet interview there are often several reporters speaking with a single star at one time. My interview with Jake Gyllenhaal was en masse, and one reporter asked the star what message he wanted audiences to take away from Brokeback Mountain. “If that were my job, then I would be the director of the movie,” said Gyllenhaal. “I just showed up to work every day. What do I want people to take away from it? I hope that they walk in with an idea, and they leave with a different one.”

They will and I did. I walked in believing Gyllenhaal was a pretty boy creation of the Hollywood star machine. I walked out embracing him as a great actor and a brave soul, although he initially turned the movie down – not because of homophobia, but because of the two-dimensional sound of a movie that is said to be about “two gay cowboys.”
“…They said, ‘uh, we have this gay cowboy script.’ And I said, ‘absolutely not. I don’t want to have anything to do with it.’ And when I learned Ang Lee was going to direct it … and the kind of passion he approaches all of his projects with, I immediately wanted to do it. And I knew that it would be about so much more than the simplification that people can kind of throw out there and laugh at…”

“You know, that’s only a suit that I think both Heath and I have been told we’ve donned later…” said Gyllenhaal when I asked him how he felt about the fact that his character in Brokeback Mountain would be a significant role model for gay youth. “It’s flattering you know. I think that it’s important that whatever somebody is, however they are, that they be accepted.”

One reporter said to Jake, “In a recent interview you said it was a compliment to be called bisexual, so you’re fine with playing gay and playing bi and all that?”

“What I think I meant to say with that,” explained Jake, “I think that this movie in particular is about kind of trying to shatter the sense of duality or

this idea of, you know, an idea of good and bad or black and white. It works within a gray area and I think that you know, sexually, I think people consider bisexuality that kind of gray area and so, I just would like – yea, whatever. It’s a very interesting place. I’m flattered to be called anything, even if it’s somebody coming up to the street and being like, ‘fuck you,’ you know, because if it bothers people or if people like it, that’s what I’m in the business of doing.”

Okay, now would someone please translate Jake’s answer for me?

 

SnowBiz Florida Agenda

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Follow Nicholas Snow online at  www.Facebook.com/SnowbizNow, www.Twitter.com/SnowbizNow, and at www.SnowbizNow.com. Follow “The Power To Be Strong” HIV Testing/Safer Sex Awareness Campaign at www.Facebook.com/PowerToBeStrong.

Spring Creek Ranch, Wyoming

Tags: , , , , ,


Return to Brokeback Mountain

By Paul Rubio

Since hitting the big screen that  fateful weekend in 2005, Brokeback Mountain ignited a fiery GLBT love affair (and profound carnal lust) for the cowboys and snow-capped peaks of Wyoming. The romance between Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal and that unforgettable “spit” scene renewed a lost bond between gay men and the American West. But more than phenomenal acting and a gratuitous soft porn scene, the movie showcased jaw-dropping landscapes that often stole the spotlight from Jake’s baby blues and pronounced crotch bulge.

Though “Brokeback Mountain” is a fictitious place, the raw nature of Wyoming is very much a reality. And while the 1960s homophobia depicted in the film prevails throughout much of Wyoming, tourist-centric Jackson Hole has evolved as a liberal enclave in the land of lassos, grizzlies and western studs. In fact, on the outskirts of Jackson Hole and Grand Teton National Park, Spring Creek Ranch (307.733.8833; www.springcreekranch.com) welcomes the GLBT community to bask in the frivolity and fantasia of one of America’s most beautiful natural playgrounds.

As the name implies, Spring Creek Ranch is indeed a ranch, but don’t expect strapping hunky cattle herders with chaps to interfere with your activities. This is a luxe “dude ranch,” catering to guests seeking a modern “Wild West” experience of horseback rides, toasty fireplaces, chuck wagon dinners, easy access to Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks, and the full range of woodsy, rustic chic cabins and mountain homes offering inspirational panoramas. Spread over one thousand acres of serenity, the ranch’s fabulous accommodations begin at the economical price point of $170/night for “Inn Rooms,” graduating to more spacious “Condominiums” and maxing out at around $2000 +/night for 5000 square foot “Mountain Villas.” Just because it’s super gay friendly doesn’t mean you’ll find rainbow flags in the lobby; it is simply an all-welcoming ranch that has staunchly supported the gay community since its opening day.

With each passing season, both the ranch and the surrounding landscapes assume new personalities, ultimately succumbing to the omnipotence of Mother Nature. Winter’s snow ushers in stark panoramas of white, snow-flaked elk scavenging for remaining plant life, opportunity for exhilarating dog sledding and snowmobiling, and of course award-winning skiing.

In fact, Spring Creek Ranch shares its downhill skiing slopes with uber-exclusive and ultra-expensive Amangani, a private enclave within Spring Creek Ranch. Amangani may garner accolades year after year as a top skiing destination, Wyoming’s colors are in full bloom by summer, when the national parks unveil the most brilliant blue skies and stunning layers of green in picturesque mountain meadows; and resident wildlife frolic and fraternize in what feels like extended summer recess. But more than mountains, buffalo, elk, and wolves, Yellowstone showcases the globe’s most extraordinary geysers and hot springs, facilitating a hydrogeological rapture that’ll blow your mind. Yellowstone’s active volcanic turf is home to half of the world’s geysers, none more predictable than Old Faithful, who shoots his load (of hot water and steam) like clockwork every 91 minutes. The liquid rainbows produced by bacteria living in the Giant Prismatic Spring rank as one of the most remarkable sights I’ve seen in 15 years of professional travel. Further north in the park, Yellowstone’s “Grand Canyon,” wows onlookers, a 900 feet deep, half- a-mile wide demonstration of nature’s sanctioned power and prowess.

I was seventy countries deep into my travels when I finally made it to the American West last July. I had combed the world over to pen my thoughts on Earth’s most exotic, remote and iconic locales, only to discover this pinnacle of beauty right here in America’s backyard. At risk of growing sentimental and even cheesy, I’ll conclude by telling you that a trip to Wyoming’s national parks is fantastically experiential and that Spring Creek Ranch is one place in the American West where you can live out that Brokeback Mountain fantasy. Jake Gyllenhaal won’t be there to guide you, but your own mountain memories will supplant and even triumph over the vivid movie in your mind.

fap turbo reviews
twitter-widget.com