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Loneliness in Intervals
Brown Eyes:
I've been thinking a lot lately about the problem of our boys spending so much time apart and the general theme of loneliness or isolation in BBM. It occurs to me that even up on Brokeback during their first summer they already were forced to spend a great deal of time apart. They were always watching each other either come or go. Up to the sheep or back to the camp. I think this is most clearly visualized in the flashback... where Jack watches Ennis ride away without looking back. When Ennis says "I gotta go" it seems to be the catch phrase for how they ended up living their lives. This coming and going on Brokeback sets the pattern for the rest of their lives and the much more prolonged separations during their 20 year affair. The idea that happiness comes in waves or short bursts seems very important in BBM. It's interesting that their moment of greatest ecstasy and explosive passion comes (I think) during the reunion kiss after their longest separation of all (4 years). And, all this sets Ennis up for the final and most painful separation and the loneliness that he'll have to stand because he can't fix it. Even up on Brokeback the first summer their happiness was certainly fraught, but it came to seem perfect and ideal in their memories.
I guess the bitterness or the bittersweetness of the loneliness has everything to do with whether or not there's a sense of a future beyond the loneliness... whether they'll be able to emerge out of the loneliness into a reunion or not. This theme of the characters having confidence that another meeting is coming in the future (or not) came up in another thread and seems really important.
:'(
serious crayons:
Did you, Amanda, or anyone ever see that essay by some film critic arguing that loneliness was the main theme of the movie? I don't know that I'd go that far, but as I recall it was a really haunting and sad piece. (I thought it was by the the Washington Post's Stephen Hunter, but I just looked it up and it wasn't -- he wrote a different essay about Brokeback that I didn't like as much.)
Anyway. The idea of loneliness is definitely woven throughout the story -- the way even offhand mention of the word in dancehall music or bedroom conversation (followed by that plaintive wind howl) can trigger their looks of wistful longing.
Your mention of how bitterness exists when there's no sense of future reminds me of how Ennis' alley scene. He is so distraught at the idea that they are parting forever that it's just heartbreaking to watch, even though we viewers know they aren't separating permanently. I get sad even thinking of it. And that he's so upset even though he's off to get married! And in fact already is doing so before the crying scene is even over!
vkm91941:
I think Brokeback Mountain specifically shows us how men --all men-- struggle to connect, attach, and bond. But it's message is universal that without attachment, connection, and, ultimately, love, we are all stuck in our own trailers, remembering the things we'd change, or the words we'd say, if we ever had a chance to go back to that mountain.
Aussie Chris:
--- Quote from: atz75 on May 22, 2006, 11:19:43 pm ---I've been thinking a lot lately about the problem of our boys spending so much time apart and the general theme of loneliness or isolation in BBM. It occurs to me that even up on Brokeback during their first summer they already were forced to spend a great deal of time apart. They were always watching each other either come or go. Up to the sheep or back to the camp. I think this is most clearly visualized in the flashback... where Jack watches Ennis ride away without looking back. When Ennis says "I gotta go" it seems to be the catch phrase for how they ended up living their lives.
--- End quote ---
I don't know if I really see their time on Brokeback as being necessarily about being "apart", more like the bread-winner going off to work and returning home to the love of his life, it even has a breakfast and supper motif. I see the theme of what you're saying Amanda and I agree with the parallel you draw, but this is very different from the four year separation, with Ennis' becoming distressed in the alleyway since, from his perspective, this is the last he'll see of Jack Twist.
Once we get into the rhythm of the affair though, separation seems be more of an issue for Jack than for Ennis. Ennis seems able to "know" that the love of his life is out there without the need to be with him. Frankly I don't think Ennis could deal with more of Jack during this time, at least from a public-knowledge perspective, his paranoia wouldn't have allowed it. For Ennis, the relationship seems ideal, or at least in balance between being with Jack (after all "going fishing" can be explained) and not being with Jack (the rest of his life). I think Jack understood this, which explains why he never pushes Ennis after idea of the cow-and-calf operation is shot down. That is of course until the idea of "a future" is threatened when Ennis puts off the next fishing trip until November. Suddenly, and finally, Jack is forced to say things that he was unable to say at the motel, his breaking point having been reached.
serious crayons:
--- Quote from: Aussie Chris on May 23, 2006, 02:03:40 am ---Once we get into the rhythm of the affair though, separation seems be more of an issue for Jack than for Ennis. Ennis seems able to "know" that the love of his life is out there without the need to be with him. Frankly I don't think Ennis could deal with more of Jack during this time, at least from a public-knowledge perspective, his paranoia wouldn't have allowed it. For Ennis, the relationship seems ideal, or at least in balance between being with Jack (after all "going fishing" can be explained) and not being with Jack (the rest of his life).
--- End quote ---
Chris, I agree that Ennis does not want more frequent rendezvous, for the reasons you mentioned. But I think he does feel loneliness -- he just deals with it, or represses it the way he learned to repress his attraction to men. A good illustration of this for me is the scene when his family is sitting around watching TV on Saturday night in their bleak little apartment and Alma suggests going to the church social. Not only does Ennis look bored and unhappy (and lonely!) in this scene, but it shows how lonely he is with everybody; he can't socialize with the "fire and brimstone crowd" -- that is, people who would disapprove of him and Jack, ie, (he assumes) the whole world. Compare how unhappy he looks there, to the way his eyes light up in that scene where he drives up to the campsight where Jack is waiting and they beam at each other. The pie scene is another study in abject loneliness. And he looks pretty lonely sitting in the bar drinking beer just before Cassie introduces herself. But loneliness is something he figures he can't fix and just has to stand.
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