Cuz Mala is a single mami, I never get to see movies when they come out in the theaters. I have to wait for them to come out on DVD and then wait for the kids to go to sleep. This past weekend, my Netflix finally sent me the next Oscar winning film on my queue, Gus Van Sant’s, Milk starring Sean Penn.
Now there will be some spoilers so please if you haven’t seen the movie or don’t know anything about Harvey Milk then you may want to stop reading now.
That said, I knew about Harvey Milk before I saw the film. So the story wasn’t a surprise. What was a surprise was in this story about the GLBT movement or at least Milk’s role in it, was how white it was. I don’t know San Fran or The Castro District pero there had to be more people of color involved in the struggle. Claro this assumption comes from my own knowledge and experience in dealing with the GLBT movement here on the east coast, a la Sylvia Rivera.
I was also surprised that Diego Luna was in the film. Then I was disappointed. Luna plays Jack Lira, Milk’s lover aka the tragic gay Latino. Don’t get me wrong. Some of my favorite lines in the film are related to Jack like, “The Latino has locked himself in the closet” when well Luna’s character during what can only be described as a temper tantrum , locks himself in a closet. Another line that made me giggle was when a drunk Dan White, played by Josh Brolin, says ” I don’t even know who you are, you just showed up out of nowhere, Latino man.”
The fact is that we, the viewers never really know who Jack Lira is. Now I know the movie is Milk not Lira, pero I felt that Lira’s character was a caricature, a childish alcoholic who was seen as a problem to Milk’s political aspirations and was prone to be jealous and mentally unstable to the point of killing himself in a dramatic fashion almost worthy of a novela. Even in interviews with Luna about playing Lira , Luna describes Lira as “simple”.
Pero all in all, Milk is an enjoyable film. Penn does a good job, I thought, especially in examining the issues of power and personal politics pero it does a poor job of looking at the bigger picture, especially in how the POC queer community played a role in the struggles of the 70’s beyond cooking, dancing, drinking and offing themselves.
What do others who have seen the film think?
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3 Responses to Mala’s Monday Movie : Milk
Jennifer
March 30th, 2009 at 10:33 am
I had the exact same thoughts about the Lira character, and hated Luna’s performance. Not only was it heavily stereotyped and overcamped, it was just bad.
As far as the POC issue, I have no idea what it was like in the mid-70s, but the city of San Francisco (not the Bay Area) is overwhelmingly white (followed by Asian American). The Castro isn’t diverse at all now, but I assume it must have been before — as the city itself must have been — back when it was a normal city, not one of the most expensive on the planet. Everybody who lives in SF knows, for instance, that back in the day there was a strong black community in the city, before the high cost of living drove everyone over the bridge, literally.
bianca
March 31st, 2009 at 4:26 pm
I agree, the film was color-free for the most part with only 1 Asian character. I think it is also important to note that each of the characters of Color received a stereotypical nickname by the White cast members (Asian man= Lotus Blossom & I can’t remember the Latino nickname (perhaps I blocked it out)) . I know this can be seen as a form of inclusion and love, yet I wonder how it may be read by folks not in the community, movement, and with any other lens they are viewing the film with may read such name/calling.
I also wondered if the use of the term “Latino” was accurate for that time and space. My assumption was that the term “Chicano” would have been more of an identifier or a zone of contention for the character.
Maegan La Mala
April 1st, 2009 at 6:54 am
That’s a whole other aspect of the film, the naming in and out of the movie, the nicknames pero also the inaccuracies. I don’t think Latino was the term used then pero I think that was a conscious choice so as to make Jack Lira’s ethnicity generically Latin when yes he was Mexican-American or Chicano, however he would have self-identified.