Love and Sexuality
HOLLYWOOD -- "Brokeback Mountain" seems to have everything going for it: great reviews, a remarka... Ready or not, audiences ta
HOLLYWOOD -- "Brokeback Mountain" seems to have everything going for it: great reviews, a remarkable opening weekend and dominance in the first wave of the Hollywood awards season, underscored Tuesday by seven Golden Globe nominations, the most of any film.
Over the next several weeks, the movie about two handsome young cowboys falling in love with each other -- dubbed by some wags the gay "Gone With the Wind" -- will be released across the United States in cities where its themes of repressed sexuality and cultural intolerance may prove a tougher sell than they have New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco, with their concentrations of cineastes and gay and lesbian populations.
"Brokeback Mountain's" future in the heartland will offer a classic test of whether what the movie business considers its best work will be embraced by audiences whose values may be more conservative than Hollywood's. In some ways, "Brokeback" could prove a counterpoint to the phenomenal success of last year's "The Passion of the Christ," a film disparaged by Hollywood power brokers and many film critics that still emerged as a blockbuster.
The controversial cowboy movie, which is rated R in part for its sexuality, also is hitting theaters at a time when filmmakers and studio executives are worried they are losing touch with audiences, as reflected by a nearly yearlong box-office slump.
"Between the controversy and the reviews, `Brokeback Mountain' is becoming a `must-see' movie of the year," said Jerry Pokorski, executive vice president and chief film buyer for Pacific Theatres and ArcLight Cinemas, which has about 400 theaters across the country. "Maybe in Wichita Falls it will be a different story, but I still believe that good reviews -- and good films -- drive the business."
Just this year, "Capote" attracted consistently good reviews, but so far has grossed just $10.4 million in more than 200 theaters. Within movies that have gay themes, the stronger the sexuality the weaker the films tend to perform. Although toned-down gay-themed movies such as "The Birdcage" and "Philadelphia" were hits, the far more explicit (and Oscar-winning) transgender drama "Boys Don't Cry" sold only $11.5 million in tickets.
"I really don't think America is ready for a homosexual love story like this," said Peter Sprigg, vice president for policy at the conservative Family Research Council in Washington, D.C. "I'm sure it has a great deal of appeal within the Hollywood community itself, which is already committed to a pro-homosexual ideology, but I can't see it as a big box-office success."
Added Dave Bossie, who was the executive producer of the anti-Michael Moore documentary "Celsius 41.11" and heads the conservative grass roots organization Citizens United: " `Brokeback' will not only encounter resistance, but empty theaters. My wife and I watched the trailer in a theater a few days ago and sensed an audible revulsion to two men passionately embracing and kissing on the big screen.
"Blue-collar workers (and) predominantly heterosexual women are not going to pay to see this story in large numbers. The conservative audience that made `The Passion of the Christ' so successful will be the death knell for `Brokeback Mountain.' "
"E-mails are running 50 to 1 in favor of the film -- and not just from (gay and lesbian organizations)," said Jeff Kaufman, vice president of film for Memphis, Tenn.-based Malco Theatres, a family-owned chain of about 300 screens in small towns such as Blytheville, Ark.; Owensboro, Ky.; and Oxford, Miss.
" `Brokeback' is a high-quality film, a terrific picture and there seems to be broad-based interest. A gay theme certainly didn't hurt `The Birdcage,' which had great commercial success," Kaufman said.
"We've sold about 40 tickets over the Internet for the Friday screening, more than for any other movie we are showing, including `King Kong,' " said Terrell Falk, vice president of marketing and communications for Cinemark USA Inc., which has more than 2,000 screens in 200 theaters, primarily in Utah, Ohio, California and Texas.
Still, novelist Larry McMurtry, who with co-screenwriter Diana Ossana adapted E. Annie Proulx's short story into "Brokeback Mountain," says the film's examination of secret love in the wilds of Wyoming should hold universal appeal.
"I don't know how this community would respond to it," she said. "It's a pretty conservative type of place. I certainly hope they wouldn't be (offended by the movie). I think it's something they should see regardless."
The film's producer and distributor, Focus Features, says it is encouraged that among the ticket buyers in the opening weekend were a significant (but unspecified) number of straight men who came with their girlfriends or wives.
James Schamus, a Focus co-president, said the stereotype of the "Middle American who votes Republican and runs screaming from the theater at the thought of this movie is being exploded as we speak."
This is cache, read story here
