Oooh, Yadie, good thread. Good posts, all of you.
Last week I went out to dinner with some friends that I hadn't seen in about six months. Two bottles of wine later, my friend Will (straight, not that it matters) announced, "Well, I just saw the most amazing movie. Brokeback Mountain - have you seen it?" I smiled and nodded, and everyone else at the table chimed in and said "Oh my God, wasn't it incredible?" They all nattered on about it for fifteen minutes or so, until the conversation evolved into something else, and I just sat there and listened to them, delighted in their excitement. I thought about telling them about how much I loved the film, and about you guys, and about our wonderful connection with the Tremblays, but I didn't.
On the way home, my boyfriend asked me why I had kept so quiet, and I told him that in some ways, my relationship to the movie is so private that I find it difficult to discuss it. I can write about it, but when I try to talk about it, my brain goes all soggy and I can't get the words to work. It all sounds so inadequate.
Also, I love having private passions. Unlike some Tremblayans, I have been affected like this by a few other films and novels, though not many. It's part of my emotional make-up to be drawn deeply into things. My family are all sensible pragmatists (but nice ones), and so I learned very early on to keep some of my feverish obsessions for myself. It's a pleasure to have a secret. I don't have to expose my beloved little passion to their scorn or ambivalence, but I can treasure it in my own way.
I also don't feel overly angry at my friends who haven't taken to Brokeback in the same way, because I know I've read books and watched movies that are deeply important to them, and *whisper it* hated them. It's terrible when that happens. You want so badly to love them, but you can't. People are moved by different things, and at different times in their lives. C'est la vie.
Are secrets and lies always insidious? I don't know, but I don't think so. I may be distinctly in the minority here, but I'm not convinced that honesty is always the best policy. Sometimes I want people to lie to me. The truth can be a terrible weapon.