
2009 is going to be my year! I've set my
goals, realistically of course, and already brainstormed how this is going to
happen. Iβm looking forward to it no longer being 2008, one of the most
difficult and stressful years of my young life, however Iβm more looking forward
to 2009 being the year of Gwen. Iβm ready to leave my comfortable shelter and
venture out into the big, bad world.
But honestly before I start anything crazy or at least different, I still have
some beefs to address. Yes, one of my goals this year is to stop getting
dramatic over silly things (like celebrity gossip and my imaginary boyfriends),
but that does not mean I can stop giving my opinion about bad movies and the
ever overhyped βAwards Season.β I say that with very dramatic air quotes.
So far only
the Golden Globes and a handful of Critics Associations have doled out their
opinions and awards. The only one that matters to me is Independent Spirit
Awards. You were thinking I was going to say the Oscars, but after watching
half of the movies up for consideration, I vote no for the Oscars in 2009. I
enjoyed
THE
CURIOUS CASE OF BENJIMAN BUTTON
when I saw it under the name of
FORREST
GUMP
or
FRIED
GREEN TOMATOES
.
REVOLUTIONARY
ROAD
lost my interest after I saw the preview before MILK. BUT, that
brings me to my favorite studio movie of the year (not counting
DARK
KNIGHT
), MILK.
MILK
is a beautifully detailed, however inaccurate some people will
say, biography of San Franciscoβs first openly gay elected official Harvey Milk.
Sean Penn transforms himself into the title character. He completely loses his
usual toughness and embraces a tenderness rarely seen from the actor. I could
not stop leaning over to my movie buddy to announce how amazing I found the
movie and how much I didnβt want it to end.
Just like in TITANIC, we know what happens at the end. Milk foreshadows his own
brutal murder in the opening monologue, but by the end of the film you still
canβt believe such an influential and prolific figure left us so young. This
film unintentionally mirrors the current Proposition 8 controversy in California
as Milk battles to stop Proposition 6βthe right for companies, leasing offices,
and schools to discriminate based on sexual orientationβfrom affecting the
homosexual citizens of California. As the film spans 15 years of Milkβs life,
we experience all his ups and downs, pleasures and pratfalls, and his eventual
and untimely death. This is the best movie of the βAwards Season,β and I could
not think of a more appropriate βthinking filmβ for 2009.
Gwen Reyes
DFW Tea Readers Group and FILM club
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