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(US 1999) Rated R Starring: Hilary Swank, Chloë Sevigny, Peter Sarsgaard, Brendan Sexton III Directed by Kimberly Peirce Writing credits: Kimberly Peirce, Andy Bienen Fox Searchlight Pictures * 116 minutes |
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There are rare moments in the cinema where awe and wonder overcome reason. What you know are actors and sets and lighting and scripted lines become more than just a good movie -- they become real, a separate universe where you lose the sense of sitting in a theatre and become totally, blissfully, unconsciously immersed in the world of the film. These moments are rarely large, sweeping ones;
the ship sinking in Titanic, Charlton Heston parting the Red Sea,
and shots of the desert in Lawrence of Arabia are the only ones
that come to mind. No, usually these are small, almost undetctable flickers
of reality: the dewy glimmer in Audrey Hepburn's eyes in Breakfast
at Tiffany's, the silent anger of Marlon Brando in The Godfather,
the weary confusion of Cher in Moonstruck. These are miniscule
details in actuality, but very often, they are what make the difference
between a good film and a great one. Such small moments fill almost every moment of Hilary Swank's tour-de-force performance in BOYS DON'T CRY, one of the most important and alarming films released this year. Swank's performance as the young 'boy' Brandon Teena is a star-making turn, the center and foundation of Kimberly Peirce's startling debut film. Based on a true story, BOYS
DON'T CRY follows the last weeks in the life of Brandon Teena. Born
a biological female, Teena Brandon was convinced that her sex was a
genetic defect, and that she was, in fact, a boy. Too poor to explore
costly gender re-assignment surgery, however, Teena took a tremendous
step by choosing to live as a male, changing her name to Brandon Teena.
Brandon fell in with a new group of friends in Falls City, Nebraska,
including John (Peter Sarsgaard), Tom (Brendan Sexton III), and Lana
(Chloe Sevigny). Things work out initially, as Brandon is able to blend
in with his male friends. Even more promising, he falls in love with
Lana and begins a youthful (and sexual) relationship.
-Gabriel Shanks |
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Review text copyright © 1999 Gabriel Shanks and Cozzi fan Tutti. All rights reserved. Reproduction of text in whole or in part in any form or in any medium without express written permission of Cozzi fan Tutti is prohibited.
