hackthis_archive (
hackthis_archive) wrote2005-10-27 11:50 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Today's topic of discussion.
In today's Variety there's an article on Brokeback Mountain, one of many that have come out over the last few months and which will doubtlessly be followed by many more. I mention this because in reading it this comment caught my eye,
I don't believe they would have ever allowed an openly queer director to make this movie, nor do I believe that actors of this calibre would have signed on. In a long line of ironic outcomes, it took these guys [Jake Gyllenhaal & Heath Ledger] with impeccable heterosexual credentials to make this kind of breakthrough.
-Critic and author B. Ruby Rich
Do you lot agree with that?
Discuss.
I don't believe they would have ever allowed an openly queer director to make this movie, nor do I believe that actors of this calibre would have signed on. In a long line of ironic outcomes, it took these guys [Jake Gyllenhaal & Heath Ledger] with impeccable heterosexual credentials to make this kind of breakthrough.
-Critic and author B. Ruby Rich
Do you lot agree with that?
Discuss.
no subject
no subject
no subject
And Scott Thompson would have been better in the Philadelphia role -- I think he'd have been amazing and pulled that movie up from being a sometimes tedious moral lesson into a classic movie about man engaged in a struggle to survive. I don't think he'd have had the preachy, "this is good for you, you're learning a lesson in how to be a better person!" tone of the well-meaning Mr. Hank's performance. It won an Oscar, but I don't think Philadelphia has aged well.
I saw a movie in which Alec Guiness played a Japanese businessman. He acted his talented ass off, and yet his performance doesn't ring true. Sometimes, someone who *is* whatever the character is, should play the role.