Brokeback Mountain
The book Brokeback Mountain was made into the movie Brokeback Mountain.
Book details for Brokeback MountainBrokeback Mountain was written by Annie Proulx. The book was published in 1998 by Scribner. More information on the book is available on Amazon.com. Annie Proulx also wrote The Shipping News (1993). |
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Movie details for Brokeback MountainThe movie was released in 2005 and directed by Ang Lee, who also directed Sense and Sensibility (1995), The Ice Storm (1997) and Ride With the Devil (1999). More information on the movie is available on Amazon.com and also IMDb. Actors on this movie include Heath Ledger, Jake Gyllenhaal, Randy Quaid, Anne Hathaway, Kate Mara, Michelle Williams, Valerie Planche, Graham Beckel, David Harbour, Roberta Maxwell, Peter McRobbie, Anna Faris, Linda Cardellini, Scott Michael Campbell, David Trimble (III), Victor Reyes, Lachlan Mackintosh, Larry Reese, Marty Antonini and Dan McDougall. |
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Its open, unforced depiction of love between two men made Brokeback an instant cultural touchstone, for both good and bad, as it was tagged derisively as the "gay cowboy movie," but also heralded as a breakthrough for mainstream cinema. Amidst all the hoopla of various agendas, though, was a quiet, heartbreaking love story that was both of its time and universal--it was the quintessential tale of star-crossed lovers, but grounded in an ever-changing America that promised both hope and despair. Adapted by Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana from Annie Proulx's short story, the movie echoes the sparse bleakness of McMurtry's The Last Picture Show with its fading of the once-glorious West; but with Lee at the helm, it also resembles The Ice Storm, as it showed the ripple effects of a singular event over a number of people. As always, Lee's work with actors is unparalleled, as he elicits graceful, nuanced performances from Michelle Williams and Anne Hathaway as the wives affected overtly and subliminally by their husbands' affair, and Gyllenhaal brings surprising dimensions to a character that could have easily just been a puppy dog of a boy. It's Ledger, however, who's the breakthrough in the film, and his portrait of an emotionally repressed man both undone and liberated by his feelings is mesmerizing and devastating. Spare in style but rich with emotion, Brokeback Mountain earns its place as a classic modern love story. --Mark Englehart