Love letter as a metaphor

Drake 2022-03-15 09:01:02

I saw it on New Year's Eve. Days that will not be disturbed. It is not deliberate. At first it was a bit mean. Too much of the reputation is unbelievable.
Five minutes before the movie, I knew I would like it. The scenery is too open, the clouds are too elegant, and the denim shirt is very blue. Stories with optional scenes are all lucky. The theme of this movie is a closed paradise. For 20 years, the scenery has always been beautiful, and the desolate air is rich and pure in color. Thousands of sheep and two people are so lonely; a whole mountain, so vast, but only a tent, so cramped—as if the former is a universe for lifetime memories, and the latter is a small universe for passion and loneliness.
A closed environment is probably the best catalyst to breed love. It's all necessary. Companion, words, touch, warmth, nostalgia.
The ending of having to separate is probably the best way to make love last. If you don't know when to see you again, people will know how to commemorate. Know what it means to never forget.
From dating once every four years to dating every month, it is probably the best tragedy that delays love. In the end, becoming the only persistence in ordinary life, it seems that living is to survive that day.
There is nothing more narrow to give up than death. This fulfilled Ennis. It also fulfilled Jack.

Thinking of falling in love with a person, thinking about it, it may last for 20 years, and may hopelessly and persistently wait for the release of the frenzy once every four years. . . I just feel so heartbroken. This is even more painful than a 20-year marriage.
When I think about marrying a person and having children, I might never know his secrets, his fear, his wildness, and he can only see his compromise, stubbornness, dullness, and deceit. . . . My heart aches too much. In fact, loving someone to me and me to my lover are all aspects.

So, I like the rhythm of this movie. Slowly, the first half of the sea is broad and the sky is blue, naked cowboys are frolicking on the hillside, and love makes people warmly return to the child and find the child’s self; afterwards, slowly, jumping, revealing the despair of life at every typical turning point in life Place, calm, natural, reticent, or angry. In short, this slow interception makes people feel cold, and the coolness intensifies with the age of the jump and the old face.

One of my favorites is this: In this seemingly long story of homosexuality, there is a relationship of extreme nature. Some CODE that people can never let go of.
One party dared to chase, but the other did not dare to accept, or did not know how to accept the move, even if he had given up everything he had originally, even if he would rather be lonely, he would not completely elope with his lover in an escaped posture.
Only when one party dies can the other party remember it boldly, thoroughly and forever. The shirts that hug each other and wear each other's blood are not enough to prove the nostalgia, and even more should be regret. Unspeakable regret and hatred. And the loneliness willingly from then on.
Although love can make two people completely self, once they leave the closed environment like Brokeback Mountain as a metaphor, they will be suffocated by the eyes of the whole world and the outside world. Vomiting is probably a helpless metaphor, physical resistance, meaningless, and self-sufficient.
It is these desperate love rules that make me sad in front of the movie.
These landscapes and skies, broken American cars, silent couples, quarreling lovers, empty fishing boxes, women’s tears, sudden changes in children, sliding in life, and occasional debauchery appear as metaphors. . . It is enough to write a love letter. You cannot deny the unfeeling of your lover just because you have tears. Nostalgia is cruel. The distant nostalgia, especially.

Homosexuality was resisted by the whole society at that time. It was probably just the right time, the right place and the background. It was the catalyst of the story, but any gender-related factors should be downplayed here. In fact, in the movie, Ennis's wife and later girlfriend in the bar are quite good love experiencers, extremely ordinary and extremely true experiencers. His sorrow, his strength, his resistance are definitely not inferior to these two male protagonists.

View more about Brokeback Mountain reviews

Extended Reading

Brokeback Mountain quotes

  • Alma Beers Del Mar: You know, your friend could come inside, have a cup of coffee...

    Ennis Del Mar: He's from Texas.

    Alma Beers Del Mar: Texans don't drink coffee?

  • Jack Twist: Ever notice how a woman'll powder her nose before a party starts, and the powder it again when the party's over? Why powder your nose just to go home to bed?

    Randall Malone: Don't know. Even if I wanted to know, couldn't get a word in with Lashawn long enough to ask. Woman talks a blue streak.