The journey from there to here

Quick! What do "Brokeback Mountain", "Fahrenheit 9/11", and "the Blair Witch Project" have in common? Outside of being "independent" films, it would seem, not much. But the truth is, they all reaped the rewards of a largely deceptive promotional campaign, with BWP essentially being the trendsetter in that regard.

When "the Blair Witch Project" was released, the producers of the film heavily used the internet. They created a mythology around the nonexistent "Blair Witch", and they had their friends hit the websites heavily and repeatedly in an internet medium that had still not adjusted to the concept of differentiating repeated views from the same IP address from separate, independent views. They heavily bombarded internet message boards and built the legend up, and before long, a legend was born. As BWP became available in more and more theaters, peer pressure kept the phenomenon alive. "I have found the only people who don't like The Blair Witch Project", one memorable poster I read once stated, "are those who do not UNDERSTAND it."

I saw it, understood it, and found that, while it was a quite good film considering its low budget approach, it was not a film of lasting entertainment value whatsoever.

Now, Fahrenheit 9/11 entered the picture some years back and a similar approach was used. Internet message boards, the insinuation that anyone of any intelligence, sophistication and culture was seeing that and the implication that, if you weren't, well, the conclusion was obvious.

Fast forward to 2005, and "Brokeback Mountain", which goes even further. Gay activists have spent over a decade trying to convince us that anything short of an outright endorsement of their culture is "homphobia" and shamefully exploiting the tragic deaths of Matthew Sheppard and Teena Brandon (No I will NOT call her "Brandon Teena"; she never went by that name while she was living!). They have used the similar peer pressure of the previous two releases, making the obvious implication that NOT seeing the film is because of our homophobic (and/or latent homosexual) tendencies.

But they've gone further even than THAT. You see, "Brokeback Mountain" was subject to the usual late season limited release of movie producers hoping to generate ticket sales from Oscar buzz. But they released it exclusively in markets where they KNEW they had strong support from the homosexual community, who would stand in line to ensure this movie received the publicity it deserved. They brought out the cameras and created a phenomena; hordes of people who were standing in line to see the "gay cowboy" movie, as if those hordes were at all representative of the public at large. The purpose seems clear; the hope that, as Brokeback moves to smaller venues and towards the heartland, the collective guilt of those who stood by while Sheppard and Brandon were murdered would drive them to see this movie as some sort of penance regardless of their beliefs, and that the producers could then market this as a "phenomenon", citing, among other things, its staying power despite the fact that the "staying power" was only the result of a carefully strategized scheduling not entirely unlike a political campaign.

The sad part of it is, from my perspective, they may have ruined what some otherwise harsh critics have called a quality film with their hype.


Comments (Page 2)
2 Pages1 2 
on Feb 01, 2006

simply because I see nothing interesting about 2 sheep workers in 1960s Wyoming.

If they are in Cattle Country, that would get them shot long before their sexual persuasion!

on Feb 01, 2006
Didn't Burl Ives sing it?


yup...among others, all of whom seem to have cleaned it up considerably which is why it came to mind while wondering how naive ya gotta be to believe real life in the american west circa 1800 resembled the kinda fantasy world depicted in 'red river' or 'liberty valance' half as much as a bottlenose dolphin does a power drill.

thanks to ives, 'big rock candy mountain' was transformed into bonafide americana which, in turn, made it an obvious choice for the allegorical 'oh brother where art thou'.

while there may be plenty of reasons why 'brokeback mountain' fails, failure to comply with the 'code of the west' aint one of them.

as you'll discover by checking this link, i was incorrect in thinking mcclintock presented his song to the world right around the turn of the century. not that it's terribly important; it aint as if the world it describes suddenly came into existence in 1928 having never ever existed 30 or 130 years earlier.

Link

if you wanna hear a few moments of the 1928 recording (remastered and included as part of the 'o brother whereart thou?' soundtrack), go here
Link
on Feb 02, 2006
Out of curiosity, has anyone read anything about male prostitution in the West? I'm not for a moment saying there weren't homosexuals. I've lived waaay back in the hollers of Appalachia, and, believe it or not, they're there, too. They of course are pariahs and live in constant fear, but if they are there they were probably in the West too.
on Feb 02, 2006
Out of curiosity, has anyone read anything about male prostitution in the West?


how long did oscar wilde's american visit last?
on Feb 02, 2006
"how long did oscar wilde's american visit last?"


He also spent a lot of time insulting the Church and the British education system of the time. Weren't they bastions of homosexuality?
on Feb 02, 2006
"as you'll discover by checking this link, i was incorrect in thinking mcclintock presented his song to the world right around the turn of the century. not that it's terribly important; it aint as if the world it describes suddenly came into existence in 1928 having never ever existed 30 or 130 years earlier. "


Well, I'm pretty dissillusioned by the idea of being 'buggered sore' by hobos, but at least the little streams of alcohol are still promised to be tricking out of the rocks...
on Feb 02, 2006
I'm pretty dissillusioned by the idea of being 'buggered sore' by hobos, but at least the little streams of alcohol are still promised to be tricking out of the rocks...


every time one door opens another ummmmm perhaps i can dig up a less visual message of consolation? (if i wasn't laffin so hard, it would be lots easier)
on Feb 02, 2006
you've seen way too many movies as it is if you truly buy into that vision of the american west of the 19th century.


First off I was lead to believe the movie wasn't about cowboys in the 1800's. Was I misinformed? Whether or not you believe "white hats' vs. black hats' (figuratively stated) existed in the 1800's, your choice... I think your imagination is working overtime assuming I think one thing, when in fact, I know another. Gay's existed through out history, even in the 1700-1800's. However, during the period I referenced they were deep in their closet making -0-social footprint.

I read the lyrics and don't get the pertinence of a song about hobos describing a child being recruited into hobo life. If anything, child molesting comes to mind.
2 Pages1 2