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The New York Times published its list of the 100 best films of the 21st century so far. The entries were decided via polls in which more than 500 filmmakers voted for the best 10 movies, and the list ...
A Hollywood travesty. “Brokeback Mountain” co-writer Diana Ossana remembers the moment she knew the gay romantic drama would lose the Oscar for Best Picture. In a new interview with the New ...
Ahead of a theatrical re-release of the Ang Lee film, TheWrap speaks with its creatives about the tragic love story's lasting impact The post ‘Brokeback Mountain’ at 20: How the Landmark Queer ...
Brokeback Mountain chronicles the decades-long complicated romance between two cowboys in the American West. The romantic drama premiered at the 2005 Venice Film Festival and hit theaters on Dec ...
The well-known critic faced several tough questions from the host, with some of them focused on her controversial blog, ...
"Brokeback Mountain" producer and co-writer Diana Ossana won the Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay, but her film lost out in one of the most shocking Best Picture upsets in history.
The " Brokeback Mountain" virtual live-read will stream on NewFest’s Facebook and YouTube channel Sunday, Oct. 18, at 6 p.m. ET. This year’s festival runs from Oct. 16 to 27.
Brokeback Mountain ’s text opens up when we ask these questions. The first shot of the film is a long shot of rolling landscape; before a line of dialogue is spoken we know one of the story’s ...
By today’s standards though, Brokeback Mountain probably would have won that Best Picture. Actually not probably, definitely. Earlier this year The Hollywood Reporter polled hundreds of Academy ...
"Brokeback Mountain" arrives, with all its ambiguities, in a culture that is growing accustomed to a wide spectrum of gay characters and material in theater, movies and television.
If “Brokeback” becomes an op-ed movie, a conservative backlash might energize Acad members who would love to thumb their noses at the “Red State” blue noses.