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#BrokebackMountain

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Ayer vi Brokeback Mountain con mi chico y unas amigas. Está en una selección de #Filmin. Yo no la había visto, de estas pelis que te han recomendado mil veces y no sacas tiempo para ver.

En concreto esta quería y no quería verla, porque sabía que me iba a entristecer.

Y qué llorera, madre. Me resultó triste, pero también muy bonita a su manera. Por comparación, también me causó cierto sentimiento de alegría, por lo ganado hasta ahora.

Y sobre todo, me sirvió para dedicarle un momento al recuerdo a todos esos maricones que sufrieron mucho para que yo hoy pueda vivir mi #homosexualidad con normalidad.

Brokeback Mountain at 20: Does it hold up? '

The movie that had so much apprehension, and jokes, ahead of its release. A movie that found so much meaning to gay ranch hands. And the one that Should Have Won The.. :ablobrollingeyes:. The one and only, Brokeback Mountain. A bit of a retrospective.

This movie freaking broke me. It was not very long after my first break up. And damn. Hurt me anew.

youtube.com/watch?v=lYA9NpjJU4

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@Starcade There are 2 versions of the #WeddingBanquet, both #LGBQT oriented.

The first was directed by #AngLee in 1993 which involves a gay Asian guy (partnered with a white guy) who marries a Chinese woman to placate his parents & to give the women a green card. Ang Lee also directed #BrokebackMountain (2005) for which he won an #Oscar.

Then there's the recent remake (which is really an entirely different movie) released in 2025 with involves a gay Asian couple & a racially mixed lesbin couple who try to hide the fact that one of the gay Asian guys is gay from his grandmother by marrying the Asian lesbian.

There are other complications in both movies & predictably the plots are blown. They are both entertaining gay rom coms, if you're open to that kind of thing.

The one I saw recently was the 2025 version. I have the 1993 version on DVD & will buy the 2025 version on DVD if/when its released.

Book Review: Brokeback Mountain by Annie Proulx

Hi everyone! I hope you’re all well. It’s Friday again, and it’s time for another review. Today, I’m sharing my review of Annie Proulx’s short story Brokeback Mountain.

Brokeback Mountain was initially published in The New Yorker in 1997 and is 35 pages long.

The Plot
The story follows Ennis Del Mar and Jack Twist, two young men from rural Wyoming who meet in the 1960s while working as ranch hands herding sheep on Brokeback Mountain. Their summer together on the mountain leads to an intense and unexpected romantic and physical relationship.

Characters
Ennis Del Mar
Ennis Del Mar is stoic, reserved, and shaped by a childhood marked by poverty and tragedy. He has internalized the unyielding expectations of his rural upbringing, making him both cautious and deeply repressed. His fear of the consequences of living authentically causes him to push Jack—and his own happiness away.

Jack Twist
In contrast to Ennis, Jack is more open-hearted, wistful, and hopeful. He dreams of creating a life that allows him to fully embrace love despite social barriers. His persistent optimism clashes with the rigid constraints of the world around him, setting him up for repeated heartbreak.

Alma
Alma, Ennis’s wife, is a subtle but crucial figure in the story. She discovers Ennis’s relationship with Jack and silently endures the betrayal. Yet, Alma is more than a victim; she represents the ripple effect of repression and unspoken truths, highlighting how societal expectations wound the individual and everyone else caught in their orbit.

Writing Style
Annie Proulx’s writing style is raw, unvarnished, and yet poetic in its starkness.

Proulx has a talent for capturing the rugged Wyoming landscapes in a way that places the reader directly into the scene. You can almost feel the cold mountain air pricking your skin, hear the crackle of campfire logs, and feel the vast, lonely expanse of the wilderness. The setting isn’t just a backdrop; it mirrors the characters’ emotional isolation and raw intimacy.

Speaking of characters, Ennis and Jack feel like they step off the page. They’re not just two-dimensional—they feel like real people with deeply rooted motivations, fears, and vulnerabilities.

There’s something achingly real about them. They’re not your idealized romantic leads—they’re flawed, messy, and often infuriating. But that’s also why they feel so human.

The dialogue was a particular highlight for me. It is colloquial and wonderfully attuned to the story’s setting, and what makes the writing even more remarkable is Proulx’s fantastic ability to convey so much through what isn’t said.

The silence between Ennis and Jack is just as significant as their conversations. The unspoken struggles, the repressed longing, the deep and enduring connection—it’s all there, woven seamlessly into the narrative.

Final Thoughts
Brokeback Mountain is not simply a short story; it is a poignant exploration of love, loss, and the unrelenting burden of secrecy, and it endures because the themes endure; the human experience is something everyone can relate to no matter who one happens to love.

This short story leaves a profound impression; it doesn’t merely highlight the tragic consequences of denying one’s true self but also serves as a testament to love’s resilience—even in the face of overwhelming constraints.

I am giving Brokeback Mountain a 10/10.

Have you read Brokeback Mountain or watched the film adaptation starring Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal? What did you think?

Thank you, as ever, for stopping by to read my review. It means a lot.

Until next time,

George

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