Brokeback Mountain

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Critics' Reviews

Metascore
®
87
Universal Acclaim
out of 100
'Brokeback' Is A Heartbreaker
By John Hartl, Film Critic, MSNBC

When Annie Proulx's short story, "Brokeback Mountain," appeared nearly a decade ago in The New Yorker, it was instantly recognized as a heartbreaking masterpiece — and the work of one person.

Now it's a movie, the work of several artists working at the peak of their powers, yet it retains the singular quality of Proulx's slender story. The script by Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana expands Proulx's 30 pages to a 134-minute film, yet there is no fat, thanks in great part to Ang Lee's brilliantly austere direction.

The cast is flawless, beginning with Heath Ledger's near-miraculous performance as Ennis Del Mar, a laconic ranch hand who ages two decades as he wrestles with his passionate attachment to another man, Jack Twist (Jake Gyllenhaal). Neither actor has previously been asked to take the risks they take here. While Gyllenhaal has always seemed game enough, and he's wonderfully tender in a difficult role, Ledger turns out to be the revelation.

Nothing in his earlier performances in a series of high-profile films ("The Four Feathers," "Monster's Ball") has suggested the imagination and depth of commitment he brings to "Brokeback Mountain." Ennis is rigid, monumentally repressed, almost comically spare with words, and his rare expressions of opinion are mostly mumbled in a muted voice.

Ledger embraces the anti-social nature of the man while demonstrating that actions always speak louder than words with Ennis. He may claim that his relationship with Jack is an isolated event, an interruption in his plan to marry and raise a family, but his true feelings come to the surface when he breaks down the moment he's separated from Jack for the first time.

Michelle Williams is excellent as Ennis' frustrated, initially clueless wife, Alma. Anne Hathaway adds welcome nuances to the potentially one-note role of Jack's wife, Lureen, whose lusty pursuit of Jack gradually turns into middle-aged indifference. Kate Mara is touching as Ennis'grown-up daughter, Alma Jr., who works even harder than her mother to get past Ennis' macho cowboy exterior.

They help to make this story as much of a tragedy for the women involved as it is for the men. The wives and kids are helpless; it hardly matters if they know or suspect what's happened to their families. Jack and Ennis, who begin their affair as teenagers in 1963, are just as trapped by the restrictions of the period. Ennis, who is traumatized by childhood memories of a homophobic murder, is simply unable to consider Jack's offer of a life together.

"Brokeback Mountain" carries echoes of "The Wedding Banquet," its director's previous tale of two men hiding their love, as well as McMurtry's "The Last Picture Show," which dealt with two close friends who lose their only father figure. (One member of the "Picture Show" cast, Randy Quaid, turns up in a key role as the disapproving Wyoming trail boss who inadvertently brings Jack and Ennis together by hiring them.)

Yet in the end it's Proulx's vision that survives and drives every scene. What you take away from the story and the film is her intense focus on a forbidden hunger that will not be denied.

More movies on MSNBC 

When Annie Proulx's short story, "Brokeback Mountain," appeared nearly a decade ago in The New Yorker, it was instantly recognized as a heartbreaking masterpiece — and the work of one person.

Now it's a movie, the work of several artists working at the peak of their powers, yet it retains the singular quality of Proulx's slender story. The script by Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana expands Proulx's 30 pages to a 134-minute film, yet there is no fat, thanks in great part to Ang Lee's brilliantly austere direction.

The cast is flawless, beginning with Heath Ledger's near-miraculous performance as Ennis Del Mar, a laconic ranch hand who ages two decades as he wrestles with his passionate attachment to another man, Jack Twist (Jake Gyllenhaal). Neither actor has previously been asked to take the risks they take here. While Gyllenhaal has always seemed game enough, and he's wonderfully tender in a difficult role, Ledger turns out to be the revelation.

Nothing in his earlier performances in a series of high-profile films ("The Four Feathers," "Monster's Ball") has suggested the imagination and depth of commitment he brings to "Brokeback Mountain." Ennis is rigid, monumentally repressed, almost comically spare with words, and his rare expressions of opinion are mostly mumbled in a muted voice.

Ledger embraces the anti-social nature of the man while demonstrating that actions always speak louder than words with Ennis. He may claim that his relationship with Jack is an isolated event, an interruption in his plan to marry and raise a family, but his true feelings come to the surface when he breaks down the moment he's separated from Jack for the first time.

Michelle Williams is excellent as Ennis' frustrated, initially clueless wife, Alma. Anne Hathaway adds welcome nuances to the potentially one-note role of Jack's wife, Lureen, whose lusty pursuit of Jack gradually turns into middle-aged indifference. Kate Mara is touching as Ennis'grown-up daughter, Alma Jr., who works even harder than her mother to get past Ennis' macho cowboy exterior.

They help to make this story as much of a tragedy for the women involved as it is for the men. The wives and kids are helpless; it hardly matters if they know or suspect what's happened to their families. Jack and Ennis, who begin their affair as teenagers in 1963, are just as trapped by the restrictions of the period. Ennis, who is traumatized by childhood memories of a homophobic murder, is simply unable to consider Jack's offer of a life together.

"Brokeback Mountain" carries echoes of "The Wedding Banquet," its director's previous tale of two men hiding their love, as well as McMurtry's "The Last Picture Show," which dealt with two close friends who lose their only father figure. (One member of the "Picture Show" cast, Randy Quaid, turns up in a key role as the disapproving Wyoming trail boss who inadvertently brings Jack and Ennis together by hiring them.)

Yet in the end it's Proulx's vision that survives and drives every scene. What you take away from the story and the film is her intense focus on a forbidden hunger that will not be denied.

More movies on MSNBC 

100
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
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.Read Full Review »
100
The New York Times: Stephen Holden
Mr. Ledger magically and mysteriously disappears beneath the skin of his lean, sinewy character. It is a great screen performance, as good as the best of Marlon Brando and Sean Penn.Read Full Review »
100
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kenneth Turan
Confidently directed by Ang Lee and featuring sensitive and powerful performances by Jake Gyllenhaal and a breathtaking Heath Ledger, this film is determined to involve us in the naturalness and even inevitability of its epic, complicated love story.Read Full Review »
100
NewsWeek: David Ansen
There's neither coyness nor self-importance in Brokeback Mountain--just close, compassionate observation, deeply committed performances, a bone-deep feeling for hardscrabble Western lives. Few films have captured so acutely the desolation of frustrated, repressed passion.Read Full Review »
100
ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
Ang Lee's unmissable and unforgettable Brokeback Mountain hits you like a shot in the heart. It's a landmark film and a triumph for Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal.Read Full Review »
100
USA Today: Mike Clark
It's a heart-wrenching portrayal of unfulfilled Wyoming love, but this time, we don't mean Alan Ladd and Jean Arthur in "Shane."Read Full Review »
100
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Owen Gleiberman
Brokeback Mountain is that rare thing, a big Hollywood weeper with a beautiful ache at its center. It's a modern-age Western that turns into a quietly revolutionary love story.Read Full Review »
88
Philadelphia Inquirer: Carrie Rickey
While Gyllenhaal has playful puppy eyes and energy, his performance as Jack is a blur of mustaches, sideburns and spurs that never achieves the weight of Ledger's.Read Full Review »
88
Boston Globe: Ty Burr
Brokeback may be too polished for some people, too elegantly dispassionate in its study of choked passion.Read Full Review »
75
ReelViews: James Berardinelli
Isn't for everyone, but for those who are not bothered by the homosexual relationship, it offers a study in yearning, love, and loss. It didn't affect me as deeply as either "The Bridges of Madison County" or "The Remains of the Day," but it evokes some of the same feelings.Read Full Review »
See all Brokeback Mountain reviews at metacritic.com »