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Brokeback Family Values (Brokeback Mountain)
TheRealityCheck.org ^ | 12/26/05 | David R. Usher

Posted on 12/28/2005 6:59:55 AM PST by bulldozer

These days, the film industry bemoans decreasing box office sales by crying about illegal downloads of movies. If all the major providers of peer-to-peer software had not been shut down, they might have a point.

Industries who think consumers are slaves to their products usually end up in this boat. The consumer goes elsewhere.

“Brokeback Mountain” has netted a paltry $4.9 million in box office sales, nearly identical to “Memoirs of a Geisha”. Both movies have been out for about two weeks. King Kong has earned twenty times more in only eight days of apish reincarnation.

Here is a wake-up call for Hollywood: Nearly one-fourth of viewers gave Brokeback Mountain an “F”, while 69.4% gave it an A, leaving no middle-ground. We can easily guess who these votes came from on both sides of this tin coin.

Golden Globe elites went into plebian parinirvana over the idea of two married cowboys rustling something more than livestock on the range. Monkeys go “ape” seeing themselves in the mirror, too. A “Gone With The Wind” this is not.

The business model for film distribution is changing rapidly in ways Hollywood is loathe to admit. With cable and satellite, viewers do not need to waste money going out to see movies they do not really want to see, out of sheer boredom. We can more easily surf cable to watch the best of the worst, in far more comfortable surroundings, with our favorite snacks just a few steps away. The box office and DVD rentals merely give us time to figure out what we really want to see.

Hollywood no longer has a monopoly on entertainment. The internet and video games are where celluloid ex-pats now reside.

Consumer dollar-votes are most instructive. The fish now know the difference between a real worm and a fake one with a hook on it. We are no longer addicted to seeing the latest insult to family values just so we can pretend we are hip while complaining about it at lunch.

Shock entertainment will be an increasingly marginal market. Those who wish to be successful in film and television will look to the great box office hits, shows, and the legendary acts for new foundations for the film industry.

David R. Usher is President of the American Coalition for Fathers and Children, Missouri Coalition


TOPICS: TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: brokeback; gay; hollyweird; homosexualagenda; moviereview; movies; pudding; tootsierollmountain
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To: ABG(anybody but Gore)

The butler was perfect.
---
Armand: Al, you old son of a ****! How ya doin'? How do you feel about that call today? I mean the Dolphins! Fourth-and-three play on their 30 yard line with only 34 seconds to go!
Albert: How do you think I feel? Betrayed, bewildered... wrong response?
----
Albert: I'm leaving you my stereo..
Agador(crying): I don't want it
Albert: My red boots…
Agador: I don't want them.
Albert: And my wigs…
Agador: Which wig?


81 posted on 12/28/2005 7:48:28 AM PST by AppyPappy (If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
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To: cvq3842
Apparently, D. W. Griffith's Birth of a Nation and the Leni Reifenstahl film Triumph of the Will were wonderful cinematic "technical" achievements, but as they were sympathetic to the KKK and the Nazis respectively it's almost impossible to give either any praise without feeling "creepy."

Question: I remember watching these movies in film class and I don't remember anything being said about "Birth of a Nation" being sympathetic to the KKK...Do you have info regarding this?

82 posted on 12/28/2005 7:50:23 AM PST by frogjerk (LIBERALISM - Being miserable for no good reason)
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To: ABG(anybody but Gore)
The Birdcage" could possibly be as funny, until I saw Nathan Lane, who was hysterical.

That was a great movie - with a gay theme! It showed love betweeen two men. Oh the horror! Its the end of the world.

I wonder how many people here bashing Brokeback Mountain have actually seen it.

83 posted on 12/28/2005 7:53:27 AM PST by conserv13
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To: Condor51
People who wear cowboy hats on the job are 'cowboys', pardner :-)
84 posted on 12/28/2005 7:53:43 AM PST by RedStateRocker
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To: Hildy
What droves for satellite radio? Sirius just hit 3 million subscribers. I will be curious to see how many stay with it after a year or so of paying $15/month just to listen to Ho-weird Stern tell scatalogical jokes for three hours a day.

And as far as the FX (I assume you are talking "The Shield", "Rescue Me" or "Nip/Tuck") and HBO ("Sopranos", "Deadwood") are concerned, there is a HUUUUUUGE difference between graphic sex/violence/language on these shows and the dreck on the big screen. If you can weed through the "filth", you'll find some pretty good writing and acting with a view not terribly different from average Joe American. Not the anti-American, anti-family screeds we get from George cLooney, Michael Moore-on and Rob "Meathead" Reiner.

And, in most of those series, people like those characters didn't marry the schoolmarm, drink tea at 4, and tut-tut the children when they did something wrong. The "filth" is, for better or worse, a somewhat accurate approximation of the way those people are in real life.

85 posted on 12/28/2005 7:55:44 AM PST by ssaftler (Politically Correct isn't! Progressives aren't!)
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To: bulldozer

"“Brokeback Mountain” has netted a paltry $4.9 million in box office sales, nearly identical to “Memoirs of a Geisha”."

Howls, Bruce. Howls of derisive laughter.

Rule 1 is applicable not just at the University of Wallamaroo, but throughout the human race.

And the astounding arrogance that propels a Westerner to write a book called "Memoirs of a Geisha." Unbelievable.


86 posted on 12/28/2005 7:56:09 AM PST by dsc (Islamic sexual violence against women should be treated as the repressive epidemic it is.)
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To: frogjerk

'Birth of a Nation' IS a cinematic milestone. It was the first epic. The camera work was revolutionary for its time.


87 posted on 12/28/2005 7:56:25 AM PST by conserv13
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To: AppyPappy

I normally get queasy just thinking about movies about gays, because except for ones like "The Birdcage", they just try to ram the PC-view of their lifestyle down your throat. The only other movie I could recommend in this genre would be "Philadelphia", which is more about AIDS, and even that one goes a little overboard trying to lay a guilt-trip on the audience.


88 posted on 12/28/2005 7:57:18 AM PST by ABG(anybody but Gore) (If Liberals had as much passion for our troops as they do for Tookie, the war would be over...)
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To: frogjerk

Good news/bad news:

McDonalds currently has "Chronicles of Narnia" toys in their happy-meals.

In response, they're planning "Brokeback Mountain" toys at Buggery King...


:) Fletcher J


89 posted on 12/28/2005 7:57:45 AM PST by Fletcher J
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To: peyton randolph

"The only way that Mel Brooks got away with it was having half the cast be homosexual. This movie would have been picketed by the 'gay rights' lobby otherwise."

Hunh? Have you seen this picture?

The way he got 'away with it' was by pushing the (true) stereotype of the flamboyant theatrical male homosexual to a ridiculously funny -- but not untrue and not unkind -- extreme.

Gary Beach DID look exactly like the Chrysler Building in that dress and tiara in the 'Keep it Gay' number. What's to picket about?

OK, the lesbians should still hate Mel for 'Shirley Markowitz'. That was mean. BWAHAHAHAAHA

This incarnation of the Producers (more than the original Mostel/Wilder piece) has always been a big ol' love letter to the musical theatre. And like it or not, anything that promotes the musical theatre is good for gay people.

If you never get to see it onstage (and preferably in New York), you can see this movie and get a tiny inkling of what all the cheering was about.


90 posted on 12/28/2005 7:58:42 AM PST by Syberyenta
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To: DollyCali

You have FRMail


91 posted on 12/28/2005 7:59:09 AM PST by apackof2 (You can stand me up at the gates of hell, I'll stand my ground and I won’t back down)
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To: Brett66
>it's probably not going to break even

Production budget
was $13mil. It has made
almost eight million.

It will probably
break even in theaters,
and maybe profit

as a DVD.
Film buffs will want a copy
for novelty sake,

and gays will want one
as a kind of memento.
If a budget's low,

almost any film
can be Corman-ed into a
small profit at least.

92 posted on 12/28/2005 7:59:34 AM PST by theFIRMbss
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To: dangus

Bearback isn't doing so well, but no matter Hollywood loves it and that is all that matters. It will win an Oscar even though it has bombed in the theaters!


93 posted on 12/28/2005 7:59:34 AM PST by Halls (Never forget Terri Schiavo!!!!!!!!!)
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To: conserv13

People just aren't as threatened as much by flamboyantly gay characters, they are more comic relief than anything, like watching a freak show, they aren't trying to be considered "normal." They know they are different.

But now you have a movie where you have two straight-acting males are involved, and that changes things. Now they are trying to create the illusion that what they are is "normal." And that's why BBM is different than The Birdcage.


94 posted on 12/28/2005 8:00:28 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: Pondman88

"The old women scenes made me cringe....."

You have to be Zero Mostel to pull that off.


95 posted on 12/28/2005 8:00:42 AM PST by dsc (Islamic sexual violence against women should be treated as the repressive epidemic it is.)
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To: AppyPappy

May I offer you a Pirin tablet? ;-)


96 posted on 12/28/2005 8:06:20 AM PST by Quilla
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To: Lancey Howard

Ledger screwed up bigtime. After "The Patriot" he seemed headed for stardom.

It's obviously too late to recommend he talk the studio folks into running "Casanova" before "Gone With the Sheep".


97 posted on 12/28/2005 8:08:26 AM PST by sayfer bullets
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To: Hildy

Good point. I was hopelessly addicted to HBO's "Rome", which had plenty of filth and bad language; but the story was very compelling (ok, James Purefoy..sans clothing..I peeked)


98 posted on 12/28/2005 8:08:33 AM PST by ariamne (Proud shieldmaiden of the infidel--never forget, never forgive 9/11)
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To: peyton randolph; AppyPappy
 
Lane is a funny, crazy guy.
 
About a week back (on the 21st) Nathan Lane was on the Letterman Show and during his interview he said something to the effect that he had a special presentation for everyone, got up and put on binoculars and a black cowboy hat (to match his outfit, of course), the curtains on the stage to the left opened up revealing a campsite with two cowboys in the tent and two more with horses. Lane then launched into song with some hilarious lyrics, while cowboys with glittery sequined cowboy hats danced in the background. Guess it was "Brokeback Mountain-The Musical!" along the vein of "The Producers". Cracked me up, it did. Wish I'd recorded it, but had no idea he was going to do that.
 
 

99 posted on 12/28/2005 8:10:09 AM PST by lapsus calami (What's that stink? Code Pink ! !)
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To: frogjerk

Actually, nothing first-hand. I have not sat through it. But every review I have seen mentions it is a landmark film, and that it has racist overtones. I took it as a given, but as I have not seen it I will have to say it is second-hand info.


100 posted on 12/28/2005 8:10:38 AM PST by cvq3842
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