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Better Most Beans Brand (Star Telegram)

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Phillip Dampier:
Beans onscreen in 'Brokeback'

Not, perhaps, since Blazing Saddles have beans around a campfire figured so prominently in a Western.

Director Ang Lee's heartbreaking Brokeback Mountain, which took four Golden Globes on Monday, could hardly be more different from the raucous 1974 Mel Brooks comedy. But beans are a distinct presence in the film's early scenes at the star-crossed cowboys' camp.

In one shot, the camera lingers on a can of them, balanced on a log, with an old-fashioned label reading "Better Most."

Don't look for the Better Most brand in stores, though. Brokeback production designer Judy Becker says it was a fictional brand.

Why such emphasis on the beans in the movie?

"Ang tends to include a lot of food references in his movies," Becker said, adding: "Food really illustrates the day-to-day lives of people."

-- Star Telegram

Front-Ranger:
I looked up beans in the International Dictionary of Symbols and it said that, in the Far East, beans are a symbol of male virility. Jack and the beanstalk, indeed!

Ellemeno:

--- Quote from: Front-Ranger on May 18, 2006, 05:29:41 pm ---I looked up beans in the International Dictionary of Symbols and it said that, in the Far East, beans are a symbol of male virility. Jack and the beanstalk, indeed!

--- End quote ---

Good one, Frontie!  :)

Front-Ranger:
Bumpin for da beanz!!

Front-Ranger:
Our leader and founder quotes the Minneapolis Star Telegram on the subject of beans! I never saw that quote at the end from Judy Becker before!


--- Quote from: Phillip Dampier on March 25, 2006, 08:14:28 pm ---Beans onscreen in 'Brokeback'

Not, perhaps, since Blazing Saddles have beans around a campfire figured so prominently in a Western.

Director Ang Lee's heartbreaking Brokeback Mountain, which took four Golden Globes on Monday, could hardly be more different from the raucous 1974 Mel Brooks comedy. But beans are a distinct presence in the film's early scenes at the star-crossed cowboys' camp.

In one shot, the camera lingers on a can of them, balanced on a log, with an old-fashioned label reading "Better Most."

Don't look for the Better Most brand in stores, though. Brokeback production designer Judy Becker says it was a fictional brand.

Why such emphasis on the beans in the movie?

"Ang tends to include a lot of food references in his movies," Becker said, adding: "Food really illustrates the day-to-day lives of people."

-- Star Telegram

--- End quote ---

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