Studying "Brokeback Mountain"

by James Clarke

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Book cover for Studying "Brokeback Mountain"

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Upon its release in 2005, "Brokeback Mountain" became a major pop cultural event. Striking at the zeitgeist sensibility, the film reminded audiences of cinema's power to dramatize our most powerful emotions and dilemmas and of its capacity to transcend the screen and become part of wider cultural debate. A modern take on a traditional genre, "Brokeback Mountain" stunned audiences with its powerfully told, tragic love story. The film also underscored the longevity of the Western as a narrative form, despite its fight for relevance in American cinema. "Studying Brokeback Mountain" compares the film to the short story written by Annie Proulx and considers its subsequent development into a feature film adaptation. The book contextualizes the film within the genre of the Western and cites the narrative and thematic conventions that "Brokeback Mountain" reinvigorates and complicates. The film is also situated within director Ang Lee's entire body of work, taking apart its textual qualities, its application of sound, its images, and its narrative structure. The volume then considers the film's reception and the range of responses it ellicited from critics, both celebratory and damning.

  • ISBN10 1906733066
  • ISBN13 9781906733063
  • Publish Date 1 January 2018
  • Publish Status Cancelled
  • Publish Country GB
  • Publisher Liverpool University Press
  • Imprint Auteur Publishing
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 160
  • Language English