Heya Jane and opinionista,
Thanks for reviving this thread!
Awww, it was one of the very first threads that I started once I had registered.
And, yes, it would be fun to go to that breakfast. For that matter, if Ang had followed them around with a camera and filmed every minute they spent together over the entire 20 years (plus the two months on Brokeback), I would buy the 100-disk DVD set in a heartbeat.) end of quote.
I know, it really would be nice to see more of the happy moments. Lee is very cruel to us in this regard. I'd buy that DVD set too. Maybe Focus Features will here about this request some day and do something about it.
Anyway, back on topic. I haven't re-read all of this tonight either... so I don't quite remember. But have we resolved the issue as to why Alma is so anxious for Jack to come in and have coffee after the motel scene? Seriously, what kind of small talk is she hoping to make? I can't even imagine how awkward such a breakfast would be. Poor Alma. Poor Jack. Poor Ennis.
The cut from the sweetness of the motel cuddling to Alma at her lonely breakfast table is just so hard to take. Actually, the mood of the motel really shifts once Jack asks "what are we going to do now?" I think some of the saddest lines of the movie are Ennis's reply to this. "I doubt there's nothing we can do. So I'm stuck with what I've got here." What a sad and awful way to think about your life and it's amazing that he really can't envision options that would make living with Jack work. I think these two sentences, though, are the ones that keep Jack hoping that Ennis might come around and find the courage to move-in with him. These lines let Jack
know exactly how much Ennis dislikes his life away from Jack. It's like Ennis's statement after the Earl-flashback discussion where he tells Jack he wants to be with him for "as long as we can ride it". He's essentially telling Jack he wants their relationship to last forever (or as long as humanly possible). So, I've always argued that this softens the blow of his rejection of the cow and calf operation idea. But, I do think more and more that Ennis's motel statement about feeling "stuck" with his life in Riverton gave Jack the courage to propose the cow and calf operation to begin with.