Too bad Alma wasn't more like the women here when she peered out through the screen door.
Maybe her marriage would have lasted, or at least been energized, by what she had seen... Maybe a little "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em" would have gone a looooong way!
Barb? Mandy? Leslie? Anyone?
rt
Well, unfortunately, given the person she was and the time she was in, that was not going to happen, was it? It was 1967. At that point, wasn't homosexuality still listed in the DSM (the psych book) as a mental illness? (I can't remember exactly when it got taken out but for some reason I am thinking 1974). Just three years before (1964) there was that article in Life magazine that basically said all homosexuals were perverts.
Even if it was the present, I don't think Alma would have been accepting of a "beat 'em, join 'em" scenario, or even an more open marriage where she and Ennis had come to some sort of understanding regarding his "fishing trips." For me, it is an issue of love. I don't think there was a real strong foundation of love in their marriage and to be able to be open, understanding, and ultimately accepting really requires a pretty deep commitment and a high degree of maturity, something I didn't see in either of them while they were married. Ennis did grow up at the end, but that was long after their marriage was over.
The one thing that surprises me in the movie, and in some ways doesn't ring true, was the fact that she accepted, or at least put up with, anal intercourse. For alot of women, that is the ultimate taboo. They may try alot of other stuff but not that. Alma didn't seem particularly sexually inventive or assertive so to go along with this...in my mind it was put in the movie to show that Ennis was, in fact, gay (in that he preferred that type of intercourse) but I don't know how realistic that is, either. This is the point where my woman experience begins to fail me in matters homosexual.
This is probably the most serious post on this thread, so far! LOL