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Region: 1 DVD Aspect Ratio: Theatre Wide-Screen (1.85:1) Language: English, French Subtitles: English, French, Spanish Weight factor: 1 item(s)
Plot Synopsis
Ang Lee's adaptation of E. Annie Proulx's story Brokeback Mountain stars Jake Gyllenhaal and Heath Ledger as young cowboys named Jack Twist and Ennis Del Mar. Each of them is hired to corral sheep on the title location and they soon bond very closely. Their platonic relationship explodes into a physical one, but eventually the two are separated when their job comes to an end. Although the two follow different life paths -- one becoming a father of two and the other marrying into a successful business -- they have a reunion years later. Each is affected profoundly by the rekindling of their old feelings for each other. Those feelings lead each to consider what continuing their hidden relationship would cost them. The screenplay was written by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
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Editorial Reviews:
Ang Lee's Brokeback Mountain is an effective and affecting psychological study of a man so afraid of revealing emotions that he nearly implodes due to his inability to express himself. Heath Ledger gives a beautifully nuanced performance as Ennis Del Mar, a man of the land who for a number of reasons is unable to share himself in a real way with anyone other than the love of his life -- and even then he is unable to open up fully. The fact that his great love is another man provides yet another reason why he feels he must keep his emotions inside himself. Jake Gyllenhaal plays Jack Twist, the more outgoing of the pair. His gregariousness wins over the taciturn Ennis, but it also is the character trait that will eventually cause the two to have their biggest fight. The film smartly observes the men's relationships with their wives. One realizes that Ennis' inability to communicate would have caused trouble in his marriage even without his affair. Jack, being the more outgoing of the two, actually attempts to find ways to satisfy his closeted impulses even though emotionally he is drawn totally to Ennis. The pair are more than ably supported by Michelle Williams playing a simple but very smart woman, Randy Quaid, and Linda Cardellini, who gives Ennis a piece of advice about love that rings remarkably true in a film that seeks nothing more than to show what is inside the heart of a man trapped by inarticulateness. The film's final scene is so small it plays at the time like an anticlimax, but when a viewer takes stock of everything the character has gone through, one realizes how profoundly the character has changed. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
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Ang Lee's Brokeback Mountain is an effective and affecting psychological study of a man so afraid of revealing emotions that he nearly implodes due to his inability to express himself. Heath Ledger gives a beautifully nuanced performance as Ennis Del Mar, a man of the land who for a number of reasons is unable to share himself in a real way with anyone other than the love of his life -- and even then he is unable to open up fully. The fact that his great love is another man provides yet another reason why he feels he must keep his emotions inside himself. Jake Gyllenhaal plays Jack Twist, the more outgoing of the pair. His gregariousness wins over the taciturn Ennis, but it also is the character trait that will eventually cause the two to have their biggest fight. The film smartly observes the men's relationships with their wives. One realizes that Ennis' inability to communicate would have caused trouble in his marriage even without his affair. Jack, being the more outgoing of the two, actually attempts to find ways to satisfy his closeted impulses even though emotionally he is drawn totally to Ennis. The pair are more than ably supported by Michelle Williams playing a simple but very smart woman, Randy Quaid, and Linda Cardellini, who gives Ennis a piece of advice about love that rings remarkably true in a film that seeks nothing more than to show what is inside the heart of a man trapped by inarticulateness. The film's final scene is so small it plays at the time like an anticlimax, but when a viewer takes stock of everything the character has gone through, one realizes how profoundly the character has changed. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
4 - customer reviews
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Cast
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Production Credits
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Alberta Film Entertainment
| - | Executive Producer | |
Alic Chehade
| - | Camera Operator | |
Ang Lee
| - | Director | |
Anne Hannan
| - | Production Accountant | |
Avy Kaufman
| - | Casting | |
Brad Moerke
| - | Second Assistant Director | |
Buzz Image Group
| - | Visual Effects | |
Carrie Marklinger
| - | Set Decorator | |
Catherine Davis
| - | Set Decorator | |
Chris Sprague
| - | Gaffer | |
Christine Thomson
| - | Costumes Supervisor | |
Christopher Porter
| - | Gaffer | |
Damon Moreau
| - | Camera Operator, Steadicam Operator | |
Darryl Solly
| - | Location Manager | |
Deb Green
| - | Casting | |
Diana Ossana
| - | Producer, Screenwriter | |
Drew Kunin
| - | Sound/Sound Designer | |
Dylan Tichenor
| - | Editor | |
E. Annie Proulx
| - | Short Story Author | |
Elizabeth Greenberg
| - | Casting Associate | |
Eugene Gearty
| - | Supervising Sound Editor | |
Geraldine Peroni
| - | Editor | |
Gerry Robert Byrne
| - | Post Production Supervisor | |
Gustavo Santaolalla
| - | Composer (Music Score), Musical Performer | |
Hudson Cooley
| - | Production Coordinator | |
James Schamus
| - | Producer | |
Judy Becker
| - | Production Designer | |
Jurgen Lutze
| - | Construction Coordinator | |
Karen Bedard
| - | Script Supervisor | |
Kathy Nelson
| - | Musical Direction/Supervision | |
Kelly Fraser
| - | Costumes Supervisor | |
Ken Wills
| - | Properties Master | |
Kirk Jarrett
| - | Stunts Coordinator | |
Larry McMurtry
| - | Executive Producer, Screenwriter | |
Laura Ballinger-Gardner
| - | Art Director | |
Linda Melazzo
| - | Key Make-up | |
Loraine Edwards
| - | Set Decorator | |
Manilo Rocchetti
| - | Department Head Makeup | |
Marcelo Zarvos
| - | Additional Music | |
Marit Allen
| - | Costume Designer | |
Mary Lou Green-Benvenuti
| - | Department Head Hair | |
Maurice Routly
| - | Special Effects Coordinator | |
Michael Costigan
| - | Executive Producer | |
Michael Hausman
| - | First Assistant Director, Executive Producer | |
Patricia Cuccia
| - | Set Decorator | |
Penny Lea Thompson
| - | Key Hairstylist | |
Peter Wunstorf
| - | Camera Operator, Second Unit Director Of Photography | |
Philip Stockton
| - | Supervising Sound Editor | |
Pierre Tremblay
| - | First Assistant Director | |
Reilly Steele
| - | Re-Recording Mixer | |
Richard Emerson
| - | Conductor | |
Rodrigo Prieto
| - | Cinematographer | |
Scott Ferguson
| - | Co-producer, Unit Production Manager | |
Tom Benz
| - | Unit Production Manager | |
Tracey Baryski
| - | Art Director | |
Trish Robinson
| - | Casting | |
William Pohlad
| - | Executive Producer | |
yU+Co
| - | Title Design |
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Format: HD-DVD
Release Date: 1/23/2007
UPC: 025193280725
Item ID: 761784
Studio: UNIVERSAL STUDIOS
ProductID: MHV62032807HD
Region: 1 DVD Aspect Ratio: Theatre Wide-Screen (1.85:1) Language: English, French Subtitles: English, French, Spanish Weight factor: 1 item(s)
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Features
Directing from the Heart: Ang Lee
From script to screen: Interviews with Larry McMurtry & Diana Ossana
Sharing the story: The Making of Brokeback Mountain
On being a cowboy
Music from the Mountain
A groundbreaking success
Impressions from the Film
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