Brokeback Mountain: Our Community's Common Bond > Brokeback Mountain Open Forum
lovable subtle details
jpwagoneer1964:
--- Quote from: katie77 on June 28, 2006, 09:29:27 pm ---Theres a scene that always makes me have a bit of a giggle....
When Ennis gets thrown from the horse when the bear scares him and is late getting back to the camp, and jack says.."Where the hell you been, I been out watching the sheep all day, and come back down, and theres no dinner for me"...(or something similar to those words)......It reminds me of a husband coming home from work, and saying to the wife "what the hell you been doin all day, and you havent even made me dinner"
Dont know if that dialgogue, was meant to look like a "husband and wife" scenario, but it did to me......
--- End quote ---
In the screenplay Jack is clearly worried, know Ennis would not slack, covers is concern with indignation.
Sheyne:
bump for later reading...
I love this thread.. :D
Katie77:
--- Quote from: atz75 on June 28, 2006, 09:41:58 pm ---Hi Katie!
Welcome to BetterMost. Have a cup of coffee and a piece of cherry cake.
:)
Oh sure, I completely agree with you about Jack's tone of voice after the bear incident. It does sound like the voice of a nagging (but loving and concerned) significant other. I think a lot about the Brokeback summer is about showing how they developed their own version of a domestic partnership. Completely on their own terms, and it evolved to suit both of them beautifully (until they were broken apart too soon by Aguirre cutting the summer short). I think this is why Jack's proposal later about ranching up together and the cow and calf operation makes so much sense. The both know they were happiest (ever) when they were living together... and that was in '63. I think Ennis even recognizes this (even as he's rejecting Jack's idea), but he's too afraid to give it a shot.
--- End quote ---
You certainly got the right word there anz.."domestic partnership"...I never thought of that before even though i know that is what I was seeing, and that is why that scene seemed humourous.....yes, they wer getting so comfortable with the situation werent they, the chores and the lovin.....and then Aguires news to bring the sheep down, was the end of the comfort zone, and that is why Ennis got angry/sad.....it also destroyed the comfort zone, we as the viewer had too, we were just settling in to enjoying their life up on the mountain, when BAM!!, it was taken away from us too...Damn you Aguire.....damn you.......who knows, another month or so up there on the mountain, and Ennis may have realized that this was the life he wanted, and not gone home to marry Alma......who knows???
moremojo:
I don't know if this might have been mentioned here already, but last night I was revisiting the DVD, and noticed something (well, a couple or even three things really) for the first time. First of all, in the scene right before Jack's harmonica-playing moment in front of the tent, we see the boys in long shot, with Jack carrying a large piece of wood (driftwood?) on his back. I can't believe it didn't register till this late, but I noticed for the first time that Ennis goes up and pats Jack on the shoulder here. This further emphasizes Ennis's growing comfort and affection for his mountain companion.
Second thing: This news is currently making the rounds, and I just confirmed it for myself last night. The new tidbit of information is that Jack, in the first tent scene, can be heard to mutter "Fuck me" two or so times right after Ennis enters him. The words are spoken so softly as to barely register, but once heard, they are definitely present. The camera even rests on Jack's (actor Jake's) face as he utters these lines. When I first heard this news, the words somehow didn't seem right for the character in this moment, but they felt completely true and appropriate when I actually heard them. This further suggests Jack's worldliness (relative to Ennis), experience, and lust.
Third item: A friend of mine asked me to watch for a detail in the scene in which Jack returns to Signal in 1964. When we see Jack driving his truck down the road, on the sidewalk one can discern two old men (one handling a cane) walking together, going in the direction opposite from the one in which Jack is heading. My friend thought that this might illustrate the life that Ennis and Jack could have had in different circumstances, of growing old together, as lifelong companions. As I don't think any element in the film is throwaway, I certainly think my friend might be onto something here.
saucycobblers:
--- Quote from: moremojo on July 05, 2006, 10:37:22 am ---I don't know if this might have been mentioned here already, but last night I was revisiting the DVD, and noticed something (well, a couple or even three things really) for the first time. First of all, in the scene right before Jack's harmonica-playing moment in front of the tent, we see the boys in long shot, with Jack carrying a large piece of wood (driftwood?) on his back. I can't believe it didn't register till this late, but I noticed for the first time that Ennis goes up and pats Jack on the shoulder here. This further emphasizes Ennis's growing comfort and affection for his mountain companion.
--- End quote ---
Oh my, I'm having so many spooky moments on the board this week! :o I also watched BBM last night (for the first time in 6 weeks) and noticed the exact same thing... and I'd never noticed it before either. I had to rewind and watch it again. It's a lovely moment.
Hmmmm... you know the theory that when people live together for long enough their biological rhythms become synchronised? I reckon there are more than a few instances of synchronised viewing rhythms on this board! ;D
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