Today's topic of discussion.
Oct. 27th, 2005 11:50 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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
Date: 2005-10-27 07:19 pm (UTC)I may be getting off track. But I agree, there would have been Issues for the studio and the backers and the all sorts of other folks about releasing a "queer" film. It's not that there are no queer films (course), but that they play at art houses and generally don't get a lot of exposure.
Also, yes, as far as we know Gyllenhall and Ledger are 100% red-blooded good old hetero boys, but then, I dunno, I've not been present for every sex act of their lives, so that could be a cultivated misperception, for all I know. It's certainly been done before (Rock Hudson?).