Stereotypes In Brokeback Mountain

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In the film Brokeback Mountain (2005) by Ang Lee, it takes a look at a romantic relationship between two men over a span of twenty years and how it changes their lives, how it affects those closest to them, and what they do to be able keep seeing each other, even though it would be easier that they stop. The film starts in the year 1963 in Wyoming, where it proceeds to follow the lives of these two men together and apart over the next two decades after their first summer together at Brokeback Mountain, and how they cope with being without each other the majority of their lives. The film is based off the book of the same name by Annie Proulx written in 1997. From beginning to end, the film does not shy away from the story it is telling, it does not fade to black when the two male leads start kissing and then have sex. The film gives a realistic portrayal of two men falling in love at that time and in that place, as well as showing two men falling in love with another man for the first - and only - time. However, as amazing as the film is, it too stumbles into the pitfalls and stereotypes that most gay and lesbian films usually fall into. One of those stereotypes right off the bat is at the end when Jack Twist, one of the two main leads in the film, is murdered by a group of men, and while it …show more content…

Because it is the “norm” it is the automatic sexuality people are expected to be. But when a non-heterosexual person has to fight so hard for the exact same rights as straight people, to be seen as equal to straight people, and to be seen as just as normal as any other straight person, it opens the door for other stories to be told that straight people don’t have stories for, because they have never had to deal with the injustices that non-heterosexual people have had to deal

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