Who
isn’t bummed that Brokeback
didn’t mosey away with the Best Picture Oscar?
But if fingers must be pointed, blame the loss on gays
for not standing up to endless parodies and jokes about the
film
“And the
Oscar for Best Picture goes to Crash…”
Even before Jack
Nicholson handed the naked gold statue to the movie’s
producers, cries of homophobia echoed from the Kodak Theatre
in Hollywood. What? No Brokeback Mountain? How
could this be? There is no doubt that Brokeback
was the favorite to win, and one would think a film
that had just won for Best Score, Best Adapted Screenplay
(go, Diana and Larry!), and Best Director would, in
fact, be the Best Picture. Well, not according to
Oscar.
Obvious
homophobia again, right? The Academy just couldn’t
stomach awarding an unashamed love story with gay sex,
right? Those damn cultural elitists caved to the
pressure of Middle America and the religious right and
played it safe by awarding a movie about racism in the LAPD,
right?
Say it with me:
“Poppycock!”
That’s too
easy an answer and one to which we all too often defer when
things like this happen. So what happened?
First,
Brokeback burnout, and for that we are all to blame.
In fact, gays are probably more to blame for
Brokeback not winning than almost any other
group (if there is one to blame). Why? Because we
allowed it to become a national joke. Oh, sure, the parodies
are funny. Oh, yeah, the jokes, including Billy
Crystal and Chris Rock at the beginning of the Oscar
show, got laughs. But at what expense?
Simple—ours.
Brokeback Mountain is a tragic story with a tragic
ending. I have yet to hear anyone explain to me what
is funny about two people who can never really admit
they’re in love, a society that wouldn’t
accept them if they did, and the possibility that one
of them dies by fag bashing (oops, was that a
spoiler?). It seemed like a laugh riot on paper, right?
But most gays and
lesbians have allowed Brokeback parodies to
flourish. Where was GLAAD when all the jokes were being made
and all the clips were being produced? Oh, no,
it’s cool to laugh at gay people.Look how funny they are. And the thought of gay love?
Hysterical! Let’s make it a joke. In fact,
in 2006, “Brokeback” became the
“Hollywood Word of the Year” as reported by
the nonprofit Global Language Monitor group. Hey,
it’s good for the box office, right?
The problem is
that Academy members may not have wanted to vote for a
joke, and unfortunately that’s what the media,
comics, and Hollywood have done—turned
Brokeback into a giant joke, a comedy skit.
It’s a shame, because Diana Ossana and Larry
McMurtry’s script is anything but funny and
Heath Ledger’s and Jake Gyllenhaal’s
performances are worthy of praise more than parody.
And then
there’s Brokeback fatigue. By the time Academy
members got around to voting, they were probably tired
of hearing about the movie, especially in the new,
lighthearted way it’s been presented. There was
no balancing voice from any gay group or organization to
refocus them or the nation on how important and
serious the discussions about this movie should be.
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Karel (Charles Karel Bouley II) is a talk-show host for
KGO AM 810 in San Francisco and is heard Saturday
and Sunday from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. or online at kgo.com. He is a columnist for
Advocate.com and In Magazine Los Angeles, and his
book of essays, You Can’t Say That, is
published by Alyson Books. He maintains a blog,
podcasts, and message boards at karelchannel.com and can be
reached at showcomments@karelchannel.com.