The first time between Ennis and Jack was between 38 and 42 minutes.
At 41 minutes and 28 seconds, before parting, Ennis turned through his pockets and found that his shirt was gone, "I can't believe I left my shirt there." Jack glanced at him and responded casually.
At 42 minutes and 51 seconds, Ennis ran into the corner and vomited because of his grief.
This person never talks much, the corners of his mouth are tight, and every kiss in a deserted mountain requires Jack to tease him. As a result, he was so sad that he vomited, beat the wall, and choked up, a full 20-second long shot, a small panorama against the light.
He knows what his future life will be like, marrying the girlfriend he met and fell in love with early on, having children, and working to earn money to support his family.
His later life was indeed like that, exactly.
He will always be a family-oriented person, because when he was young, he had no home. He grew up in the parents of his elder brothers and sisters, and his elder brothers and sisters had their own families one after another.
He is a man who cannot live without a home. And it had to be a very traditional family—hard-working wife, well-behaved kids.
Because he knew what it was like to be gay, he knew from the age of 9 that it was the nightmare of his life.
But why was he so sad about being separated from Jack?
Because he knows what love is, but he clearly understands his powerlessness.
At 17 points and 13 points, Ennis beat a deer as ration for the two of them. Jack groaned and was so happy.
At 22 minutes, the two chatted while eating and eating beside the fire. Jack looked at him tenderly and said, "Man, that's more than you've said in the past two weeks."
32 minutes and 55 seconds into the night, Ennis shuffled back to the tent with Jack, kissing, hugging, stroking.
Jack who doesn't like to eat beans, Jack who encourages him to beat a sheep to eat, Jack who can't set up a tent, can't open a can, and Jack who washes his shirt with his bare bottom...
These memories are like a kind of fire, which are connected together in the memories, spreading and burning, making the depressed and dull Ennis become the real Ennis with joys and sorrows, forever.
And Jack, who brought these fires, parted with him today.
It is too unbearable to see the parting from a loved one who will never see each other in a lifetime.
On the other hand, Jack was not so sad.
He never had the idea of separating from Ennis.
He always had a series of plans that weren't completely separate from Ennis.
Plan 1: 46 points, the second year, plan to return to Brokeback Mountain with Ennis.
This plan failed. He came back, but Ennis didn't.
Plan 2: At 61 minutes and 15 seconds, Ennis received a gay postcard - From Jack.
After that, Jack often drove to Ennis, and they went back to Brokeback Mountain to play together. But he wasn't satisfied with this vacation-like status quo, and he often tested Ennis, the silent man with a straight face.
He wants to take him away. "You and I find a small farm and do some calf business, what do you think? It will be a good life."
But Ennis says making a living is his whole life right now.
This plan also failed. Fight the protracted battle, drive 14 hours at a time just to go fishing with a friend.
Plan 3: At 80 minutes and 39 seconds, when Jack heard that Ennis was divorced, he ran over happily.
"Hi! I heard you're divorced, so here I am!"
At 82 minutes and 10 seconds, he left crying.
...
At 112 minutes and 16 seconds, Jack was dead.
His lover had mistaken him for twenty years.
But he still wasn't about to part with Ennis completely.
It starts with him and his memories on Brokeback Mountain. He will always be the harmonica playing out of tune, bouncing around Ennis, the cowboy with his own BGM, and he has lived in the heart of Ennis, a taciturn old man, for a lifetime.
- He secretly left Ennis' shirt.
In his hometown, his childhood room, he wraps his denim jacket over Ennis' shirt, and hangs the two pieces together quietly in the closet.
He'd kept that shirt from the beginning, he never wanted to part with Ennis, never.
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