![]() |
|||||||
Film Review: MilkBottom Line: Superb biopic of Harvey Milk reaches out for cross-cultural audience.Reposted from The Hollywood Reporter Opens Wednesday, Nov. 26 (Focus Features)
"Milk,"
written by Dustin Lance Black and directed by Gus Van Sant, is the
first great film to look at civil rights from the perspective of the
gay movement. The subject, of course, is the late, charismatic San
Francisco gay activist and politician of the 1970s, Harvey Milk, played
with extraordinary depth and wisdom by Sean Penn. "Milk" resists
bumper-sticker identifications: Yes, it's a biopic, a love story, a
civil rights movie and sharp political and social commentary. But it
transcends any single genre as a very human document that touches first
and foremost on the need to give people hope.
Black's screenplay is based solely on his own original research and interviews, and it shows: The film is richly flavored with anecdotal incidents and details. "Milk" surfaces in a season filled with movies based on real lives, but this is the first one that inspires a sense of intimacy with its subjects. This allows for unusual moments, such as a couple of phone conversations Milk has with a handicapped gay youth from the Midwest or his electrifying observation that he looked into White's haunted eyes and believes White may be "one of us." Van Sant moves beyond his experimental filmmaking of the last half-decade for a restrained, unembellished approach. The style is classic filmmaking of the '70s, a film that watches and observes everything and everybody. He makes excellent use of archival footage throughout the period film, especially such images as the Castro district undergoing sweeping demographic changes and the awful moment of Dianne Feinstein's City Hall steps announcement of the assassinations of Mayor Moscone and Milk. Penn is one of those actors in complete control of his entire instrument. He uses voice, body movements, line readings and something indefinable within his own psyche to transmigrate into another person's body and mind. Franco, meanwhile, demonstrates the dilemma of a person who signed up for a committed relationship but not necessarily a revolution. Luna is loopy and sometimes, seemingly, just looped as Milk's erratic boyfriend. Brolin is surprisingly sympathetic as a man in over his head, unable to differentiate between friends and foes and clinging to traditional mores in a city caught in the ferment of radical change. With top contributions from his entire crew, Van Sant captures in "Milk" an entire panoply of clashing passions, opinions and personalities within the gay rights movement that changed a country forever but drove a wedge between its people that remains to this day. Production: Focus Features presents in association with Axon Films a Groundswell and Jinks/Cohen Co. production Cast: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, Josh Brolin, Diego Luna, James Franco, Alison Pill, Victor Garber. Director: Gus Van Sant. Screenwriter: Dustin Lance Black. Producers: Dan Jinks, Bruce Cohen. Executive producers: Michael London, Dustin Lance Black Bruna Papandrea, Barbara A. Hall, William Horberg. Director of photography: Harris Savides. Production designer: Bill Groom. Music: Danny Elfman. Costume designer: Danny Glicker. Editor: Elliot Graham. Rated R, 128 minutes.
|
|
|||||||||
|
|
||||||||||







