Brokeback Mountain movie review (2005) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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Brokeback Mountain movie review (2005) | Roger Ebert (1)

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Ennis tells Jack about something he saw as a boy. "There were two old guys shacked up together. They were the joke of the town, even though they were pretty tough old birds." One day they were found beaten to death. Ennis says: "My dad, he made sure me and my brother saw it. For all I know, he did it."

This childhood memory is always there, the ghost in the room, in Ang Lee's "Brokeback Mountain." When he was taught by his father to hate hom*osexuals, Ennis was taught to hate his own feelings. Years after he first makes love with Jack on a Wyoming mountainside, after his marriage has failed, after his world has compressed to a mobile home, the laundromat, the TV, he still feels the same pain: "Why don't you let me be? It's because of you, Jack, that I'm like this -- nothing, and nobody."

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But it's not because of Jack. It's because Ennis and Jack love each other and can find no way to deal with that. "Brokeback Mountain" has been described as "a gay cowboy movie," which is a cruel simplification. It is the story of a time and place where two men are forced to deny the only great passion either one will ever feel. Their tragedy is universal. It could be about two women, or lovers from different religious or ethnic groups -- any "forbidden" love.

The movie wisely never steps back to look at the larger picture, or deliver the "message." It is specifically the story of these men, this love. It stays in closeup. That's how Jack and Ennis see it. "You know I ain't queer," Ennis tells Jack after their first night together. "Me, neither," says Jack.

Their story begins in Wyoming in 1963, when Ennis (Heath Ledger) and Jack (Jake Gyllenhaal) are about 19 years old and get a job tending sheep on a mountainside. Ennis is a boy of so few words he can barely open his mouth to release them; he learned to be guarded and fearful long before he knew what he feared. Jack, who has done some rodeo riding, is a little more outgoing. After some days have passed on the mountain and some whiskey has been drunk, they suddenly and almost violently have sex.

"This is a one-shot thing we got going on here," Ennis says the next day. Jack agrees. But it's not. When the summer is over, they part laconically: “I guess I’ll see ya around, huh?” Their boss (Randy Quaid) tells Jack he doesn't want him back next summer: "You guys sure found a way to make the time pass up there. You weren't getting paid to let the dogs guard the sheep while you stemmed the rose."

Some years pass. Both men get married. Then Jack goes to visit Ennis in Wyoming, and the undiminished urgency of their passion stuns them. Their lives settle down into a routine, punctuated less often than Jack would like by "fishing trips." Ennis' wife, who has seen them kissing, says nothing about it for a long time. But she notices there are never any fish.

The movie is based on a short story by E. Annie Proulx. The screenplay is by Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana. This summer I read McMurtry's Lonesome Dove trilogy, and as I saw the movie I was reminded of Gus and Woodrow, the two cowboys who spend a lifetime together. They aren't gay; one of them is a womanizer and the other spends his whole life regretting the loss of the one woman he loved. They're straight, but just as crippled by a society that tells them how a man must behave and what he must feel.

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"Brokeback Mountain" could tell its story and not necessarily be a great movie. It could be a melodrama. It could be a "gay cowboy movie." But the filmmakers have focused so intently and with such feeling on Jack and Ennis that the movie is as observant as work by Bergman. Strange but true: The more specific a film is, the more universal, because the more it understands individual characters, the more it applies to everyone. I can imagine someone weeping at this film, identifying with it, because he always wanted to stay in the Marines, or be an artist or a cabinetmaker.

Jack is able to accept a little more willingly that he is inescapably gay. In frustration and need, he goes to Mexico one night and finds a male prostitute. Prostitution is a calling with many hazards, sadness and tragedy, but it accepts human nature. It knows what some people need, and perhaps that is why every society has found a way to accommodate it. Jack thinks he and Ennis might someday buy themselves a ranch and settle down. Ennis who remembers what he saw as a boy: "This thing gets hold of us at the wrong time and wrong place and we're dead." Well, wasn't Matthew Shepard murdered in Wyoming in 1998? And Teena Brandon in Nebraska in 1993? Haven't brothers killed their sisters in the Muslim world to defend "family honor"?

There are gentle and nuanced portraits of Ennis' wife Alma (Michelle Williams) and Jack's wife Lureen (Anne Hathaway), who are important characters, seen as victims, too. Williams has a powerful scene where she finally calls Ennis on his "fishing trips," but she takes a long time to do that, because nothing in her background prepares her for what she has found out about her husband. In their own way, programs like "Jerry Springer" provide a service by focusing on people, however pathetic, who are prepared to defend what they feel. In 1963 there was nothing like that on TV. And in 2005, the situation has not entirely changed. One of the Oscar campaign ads for "Brokeback Mountain" shows Ledger and Williams together, although the movie's posters are certainly honest.

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Ang Lee is a director whose films are set in many nations and many times. What they have in common is an instinctive sympathy for the characters. Born in Taiwan, he makes movies about Americans, British, Chinese, straights, gays; his sci-fi movie "Hulk" was about a misunderstood outsider. Here Lee respects the entire arc of his story, right down to the lonely conclusion.

A closing scene involving a visit by Ennis to Jack's parents is heartbreaking in what is said, and not said, about their world. A look around Jack's childhood bedroom suggests what he overcame to make room for his feelings. What we cannot be sure is this: In the flashback, are we witnessing what really happened, or how Ennis sees it in his imagination? Ennis, whose father "made sure me and my brother saw it."

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Film Credits

Brokeback Mountain movie review (2005) | Roger Ebert (9)

Brokeback Mountain (2005)

Rated Rfor sexuality, nudity, language and some violence

134 minutes

Cast

Anne Hathawayas Lureen Twist

Michelle Williamsas Alma Del Mar

Heath Ledgeras Ennis Del Mar

Jake Gyllenhaalas Jack Twist

Randy Quaidas Joe Aguirre

Written by

  • Diana Ossana
  • Larry McMurtry

Directed by

  • Ang Lee

Based on the short story by

  • E. Annie Proulx

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Brokeback Mountain movie review (2005) | Roger Ebert (2024)

FAQs

Brokeback Mountain movie review (2005) | Roger Ebert? ›

"Brokeback Mountain" could tell its story and not necessarily be a great movie. It could be a melodrama. It could be a "gay cowboy movie." But the filmmakers have focused so intently and with such feeling on Jack and Ennis that the movie is as observant as work by Bergman.

What's the famous line from Brokeback Mountain? ›

15 "It's Nobody's Business But Ours."

In one of the most memorable Brokeback Mountain quotes, Jack reassures him that no one will find out, but also insists that it is just their business. This hints at the tragic divide between these two men and speaks to their characters.

What was Ebert's last review? ›

The last review by Ebert published during his lifetime was for The Host, which was published on March 27, 2013. The last review Ebert wrote was for To the Wonder, which he gave 3.5 out of 4 stars in a review for the Chicago Sun-Times. It was posthumously published on April 6, 2013.

What is the message behind Brokeback Mountain? ›

The idea of two male ranch hands falling in love in conservative 1960s Wyoming epitomizes the suggestion that love, a natural force, persists against all odds. Indeed, Jack and Ennis have everything to lose because of their relationship.

What happened to Roger Ebert? ›

On April 4, 2013, one of America's best-known and most influential movie critics, Roger Ebert, who reviewed movies for the Chicago Sun-Times for 46 years and on TV for 31 years, dies at age 70 after battling cancer.

What did Ennis mean by Jack I Swear? ›

“Jack, I swear” was Ennis apologizing for the way he treated Jack…. swearing if he could if he could re-do the relationship, he would have treated. Jack more openly, more compassionately, with more understanding and human kindness. He went to Jack's parents farm to seek…. forgiveness and redemption.

What was the last thing said in Brokeback Mountain? ›

The line "Jack, I swear" is spoken by Ennis Del Mar, one of the main characters in the short story and film "Brokeback Mountain," during a pivotal scene near the end of the story. This line carries significant emotional weight and encapsulates Ennis's feelings and promise to his deceased lover, Jack Twist.

How was Jack killed in Brokeback Mountain? ›

The men part on tense terms. Months later, Ennis learns of Jack's death, allegedly in a tire-changing accident, but suspects foul play due to their secret relationship. Lureen informs Ennis of Jack's wish to have his ashes scattered on Brokeback Mountain.

What is the irony in Brokeback Mountain? ›

The great irony is that this Jack, so adaptable to different circ*mstances, so fickle, has been tied to one place his entire life: Brokeback. And, by extension, to one great love, Ennis, even though he had a series of partners over the decades.

What do the two shirts symbolize in Brokeback Mountain? ›

That's why the shirts symbolize their separation because even though they both loved each other passionately, the only way Jack could ever get closer to Ennis was to put their shirts together as one. This was also a way to produce a symbolic time capsule to remember the summer they shared on Brokeback Mountain.

What kind of surgery did Roger Ebert have? ›

Ebert has been through a number of surgeries, first to remove his malignant thyroid in 2002, then on his salivary glands in 2003 and his jaw in 2006. Complications led to the tracheostomy and the total loss of speech.

Were Siskel and Ebert friends? ›

The two slowly developed a friendship and even a sort of love for each other over several decades, but the one-upmanship between them always remained. Siskel, a habitual gambler and Playboy Mansion regular would sabotage Ebert's interviews in order to steal his scoops whenever possible.

Who runs Roger Ebert now? ›

Ever since the passing of the site's co-founder and namesake, Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic Roger Ebert, in 2013, it has been run by his wife, Chaz Ebert.

What is the last line of the Brokeback Mountain short story? ›

The final line of the short story version of Brokeback Mountain is "There was some open space between what he knew and what he tried to believe, but nothing could be done about it, and if you can't fix it you've got to stand it," which comes after Ennis Del Mar starts dreaming of Jack Twist again, some time after his ...

What does Jack's postcard say in Brokeback Mountain? ›

Ennis gets a postcard from Jack which reads, "Ennis, see you in a couple weeks, fish should be jumping. Jack." The postmark is Childress, Texas, July 1972. A couple of weeks later, Jack is driving a blue Ford truck with a 1976-7 grill.

What is Brokeback Mountain known for? ›

The film stars Heath Ledger, Jake Gyllenhaal, Anne Hathaway, and Michelle Williams. Its plot depicts the complex romantic relationship between two American cowboys, Ennis Del Mar and Jack Twist, in the American West from 1963 to 1983.

What we got now is Brokeback Mountain meaning? ›

They have only two options: move forward or keep gazing backward at their summer together on the mountain. Jack's declaration that “what we got now is Brokeback Mountain” underscores the sad fact that the latter option is their fate.

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