Movie Review - Milk (2008)
Overall Quality 4.5 / 5.0
Gay Inclusive? Very - an engaging and moving story of the gay rights movement and one of its heroes
Gay Positive? Very - although a tragic tale, it is fiercely empowering
This is the movie I wish Brokeback Mountain had been.
Don’t get me wrong - Brokeback Mountain was a masterpiece of film-making, and it was robbed of its rightful Academy Award. But I have a love-hate relationship with such movies - beautiful, moving, and important stories that are horribly tragic and unhappy. I’m glad that a gay love story finally hit the mainstream with Brokeback Mountain, but it did nothing to dispel myths like gay-love-is-doomed and bad-things-will-happen-to-you-if-you’re-gay.
Milk also brings a tragic story to the big screen: the assassination of gay rights pioneer Harvey Milk. Yet Milk is empowering in a way Brokeback Mountain was not. Instead of vaguely feeling bad about being gay, I felt inspired, charged up and ready to fight for my rights. Milk also brings to the big screen the struggle not just for equal rights but also for freedom from the physical and emotional violence that gay people have long endured.
Just this week, former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee claimed on The View that gay rights are not civil rights because gay people have not been subjected to a history of violence like black people. Such a willfully ignorant statement is nothing short of appalling; and yet, it is representative of a surprisingly large swath of the population. Many do not acknowledge or do not care about the persecution of gays in Nazi Germany; the institutionalized violence against gay people by police in previous decades and by religious organizations (like the Mormons using electro-shock therapy to “cure” homosexuality); and individual hate crimes that have claimed the lives of people like Matthew Shepherd.
Thank God for Milk, and what a timely film it is. The movie dramatizes Milk’s move to San Francisco and his subsequent rise to the position of City Supervisor (after several failed attempts). Once in the position, a significant portion of the movie details his fight against Proposition 6, which would have enabled the state of California to fire any teacher known to be gay along with any teacher who supported them.
Fast forward 30 years, and Californians once again vote on a proposition of concern to gay rights - Proposition 8, which successfully banned gay marriage (after the California Supreme Court legalized it).
My only criticism of the film falls on the editing, and I’m not sure what the Gus van Sant could have done differently. He’s just covering so much territory in the space of a couple of hours that much of the story gets told in fast-forward. Nevertheless, the movie was engrossing from start to finish, and the phenomenal acting from all quarters - both Sean Penn and Josh Brolin deserve extra mention - imbues the story with life.
Please see this movie. Please take your friends and family to see it. Particularly in the aftermath of Proposition 8’s passage, a lot of people seem to dismiss the gay community’s reaction as sore losers throwing a tantrum because they didn’t get their way. They do not - perhaps because they are not willing to - recognize how a group of people have been systematically oppressed throughout even the history of a country that espouses the values of equality and the separation of church and state.
Milk is a sad tale, but one encoupled with hope. I walked out of the theater both devastated and determined. One thing can be said of Harvey Milk: his hope lives on in those of us who are willing to embrace it.
“If a bullet should go through my head, let that bullet go through every closet door”
- Harvey Milk
Tags: Harvey Milk









[...] sister site EQualityEntertainment.com has posted a Milk, a film by Gus Van Sant about the life of gay rights pioneer Harvey Milk. This is the movie I wish [...]
Richard, I enjoyed your review of Milk, and I’ve started exploring more of your blog. I linked to both in the following blog entry.
http://www.doorq.com/blog.aspx?b=2034
http://duanesimolke.blogspot.com/2008/11/milk.html
[...] sister site EQualityEntertainment.com has posted a review of Milk, a film by Gus Van Sant about the life of gay rights pioneer Harvey [...]
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