Entertainment > Gay cowboy film rides into Venice festival A pair of gay cowboys rode into Venice
on Friday, as Ang Lee's "Brokeback Mountain" set tongues
wagging at the annual film festival with scenes of homosexual
love in the wilds of Wyoming.
The film stars Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal, two of
cinema's hottest young prospects, and is a moving tale of
forbidden love that begins in 1963 and ends 20 years later.
It is one of 20 movies vying for the coveted Golden Lion at
the world's oldest cinema competition, which is gearing up for
its busiest weekend as more Hollywood A-listers prepare to
bring glamour and screaming fans to the famed Lido waterfront.
Both actors appear in other competition films. Australian
heartthrob Ledger is in Terry Gilliam's "The Brothers Grimm"
and Gyllenhaal acts alongside Gwyneth Paltrow in "Proof."
Ledger has a third film in Venice, the out-of-competition
"Casanova."
Ledger said "Brokeback," shot amid stunning mountain
vistas, was the first "proper" love story he had played.
"I find there's not a lot of mystery left in stories
between guys and girls; it's all been done or seen before," he
said.
"I felt this was such a refreshing story of love. For me,
our characters were also complex and to ... really investigate
this form of humanity and expression of love was an opportunity
that I hadn't had."
For Lee, director of "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon," the
film based on a short story by writer Annie Proulx was about
the pursuit of love and happiness in the face of adversity.
"Ennis and Jack are in the American West, which has macho
and traditional values. So everything they feel, they have to
keep private," Lee said.
But the aim of the film was not to make a political point
about intolerance toward homosexuals, producer James Schamus
told reporters.
"We are using the codes and conventions of romance that
have always applied to straight people very unapologetically.
We don't care if anyone is going to be upset about it. There's
not a conscious political programme one way or the other."
INDEPENDENT SPIRIT
True to the spirit of many American entries at Venice this
year, Lee describes "Brokeback Mountain" as independent and
low-budget. It was filmed in Canada, rather than Wyoming where
it is set, in order to save money.
Several U.S. offerings, including George Clooney's "Good
Night. And, Good Luck" which premiered on Thursday, point to a
less studio-oriented approach to movies, with many fully or
partially independent.
At the other end of the spectrum is "The Brothers Grimm,"
with a budget estimated at $80 million and starring Matt Damon
alongside Jonathan Pryce and Monica Bellucci.
Clooney, who acted in and directed "Good Night" and has a
home on Lake Como, Italy, drew screaming fans to his red carpet
event on Thursday, signing autographs and chatting with the
mostly female crowd.
His story of a journalist's use of television to expose the
bullying tactics of Senator Joseph McCarthy and the House
Un-American Activities Committee in their anti-communist
crusade was well received by critics and journalists, as was
Brokeback.
Venice also aims to showcase Asian cinema this year, and
the "surprise film" of 2005, which entered the official
competition at the last minute, was cult Japanese director
Takeshi Kitano's mystery movie "Takeshi's."
It screens on Friday, as does out-of-competition "Initial
D," a Hong Kong film starring Jay Chou and Anthony Wong.
2005-09-03
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