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DiscountDelight - Brokeback Mountain (Widescreen Edition)

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List Price: $29.98
Our Price: $11.49
Your Save: $ 18.49 ( 62% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Universal Directed By: Ang Lee
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Binding: DVD EAN: 0025192631528 Format: Closed-captioned Label: Universal Manufacturer: Universal Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Universal Release Date: 2006-04-04 Running Time: 134 Studio: Universal Theatrical Release Date: 2005-12-16
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Shocking! Comment: To see two mainstream actors performing intimate sexual scenes is shocking. Rather than lust it the liking that the two friends have for each other or fondness that translates into sex. It is rather like extreme male bonding. But beautifully rendered!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Are all Cowboys gay? Comment: I just don't know if all cowboys are gay or if it is just the idea of the asian director or do u have to be a cowboy when u want to be gay? I thought that the story is extremely moving and touching. Jake is a great actor he really knows how to b gay. I really thought that he is in love with Heath. At the beginning of the movie Jake seemed to be more like a frat boy though but later he appeared to be more mature and rough like a real cowboy. Even the score was great although I usually do not like country music. I could have done without the sex scene.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Brokeback Mountain - The Art of filmmaking Comment: Brokeback Mountain - Ang Lee told on an interview (seen on DVD bonus features) that he loves the sound of those 2 words together and that he will regret for the rest of his life if he didn't made the film. Nor only he just made a marvellous movie but also a masterpiece.
The movie is full of riddles:
The names: Ennis del Mar (Island Of The Sea), Jack Twist (the name speaks for itself - the twist of emotions), Alma (Soul), Alma Jr. Some scenes (in fact, almost all): The dead sheep as Ennis saw, AFTER the first tent scene, remembered him his youth with his brother when they saw the dead man... Brokeback looks (filmed by Ang Lee with subtlety), strange on that particular scene... The brutal Jack's homicide is imagined by Ennis? And Lureen told a lie?
Heath Ledger was robbed by the Academy, Ang Lee also and so on... But, I remember now - the Academy don't watch the movies they award.
This movie is so beautifully filmed and that mades an incredibly unforgettable movie experience. You can watch it a million of times and still be amazed with each viewing.
Put aside your prejudices and watch the movie for what it is: a piece of Art. Don't judge the story, only the movie.
A review about a movie shouldn't be only about the story.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A Truly Beautiful Film Comment: The film had a profound effect on me personally as it did many other people, staight and gay alike. This film wonderfully combines score, cinematography, script and acting while being expertly directed by a master, Ang Lee. Ang Lee was awarded the Oscar , Golden Globe and the Director's Guild award for his direction of Brokeback Mountain. The story is one of a never fully realized love that suffers from what society deems love "should" be. The acting by the entire cast is first rate. Never over the top but, showing just the right amount of restraint to make the characters seem as if they are real people. Brokeback Mountain is a ground breaking film that i will still consider years from now as one of my all time favorites!
Customer Rating:      Summary: I should've seen it earlier. Comment: After buying the DVD for this motion picture, I only wish that I'd caught it in theaters. It was that good.
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Editorial Reviews:
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A sad, melancholy ache pervades Brokeback Mountain, Ang Lee's haunting, moving film that, like his other movies, explores societal constraints and the passions that lurk underneath. This time, however, instead of taking on ancient China, 19th-century England, or '70s suburbia, Lee uses the tableau of the American West in the early '60s to show how two lovers are bound by their expected roles, how they rebel against them, and the repercussions for each of doing so--but the romance here is between two men. Ennis Del Mar (Heath Ledger) and Jack Twist (Jake Gyllenhaal) are two itinerant ranchers looking for work in Wyoming when they meet and embark on a summer sheepherding job in the shadow of titular Brokeback Mountain. The taciturn Ennis, uncommunicative in the extreme, finds himself opening up around the gregarious Jack, and the two form a bond that surprisingly catches fire one cold night out in the wilderness. Separating at the end of the summer, each goes on to marry and have children, but a reunion years later proves that, if anything, their passion for each other has grown significantly. And while Jack harbors dreams of a life together, the tight-lipped Ennis is unable to bring himself to even consider something so revolutionary. Its open, unforced depiction of love between two men made Brokeback an instant cultural touchstone, for both good and bad, as it was tagged derisively as the "gay cowboy movie," but also heralded as a breakthrough for mainstream cinema. Amidst all the hoopla of various agendas, though, was a quiet, heartbreaking love story that was both of its time and universal--it was the quintessential tale of star-crossed lovers, but grounded in an ever-changing America that promised both hope and despair. Adapted by Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana from Annie Proulx's short story, the movie echoes the sparse bleakness of McMurtry's The Last Picture Show with its fading of the once-glorious West; but with Lee at the helm, it also resembles The Ice Storm, as it showed the ripple effects of a singular event over a number of people. As always, Lee's work with actors is unparalleled, as he elicits graceful, nuanced performances from Michelle Williams and Anne Hathaway as the wives affected overtly and subliminally by their husbands' affair, and Gyllenhaal brings surprising dimensions to a character that could have easily just been a puppy dog of a boy. It's Ledger, however, who's the breakthrough in the film, and his portrait of an emotionally repressed man both undone and liberated by his feelings is mesmerizing and devastating. Spare in style but rich with emotion, Brokeback Mountain earns its place as a classic modern love story. --Mark Englehart
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