Safe as ‘Milk,’ and just as bland
Fiery life of gay politician boiled down to a well-acted but routine biopic
Focus Features |
Video |
Milk, Moscone killed in city hall Nov. 27, 1978: Watch NBC Nightly News coverage of the Mayor Moscone and City Supervisor Harvey Milk killings. Dianne Feinstein, then a city supervisor, delivered an emotional press conference. Nightly News |
Video |
Brolin, Franco at ‘Milk’ premiere James Franco, Emile Hirsch, Josh Brolin and Diego Luna hit the red carpet in San Francisco's Castro district where the historical film, "Milk," was based. Access Hollywood |
|
He once famously noted, “If a bullet should enter my brain, let that bullet destroy every closet door.” And if his assassination didn’t quite accomplish that lofty goal, it certainly made a difference in the lives of millions of people.
Milk’s extraordinary life and death inspired Rob Epstein’s powerful, Oscar-winning documentary “The Times of Harvey Milk,” but I’ve spent much of my adult life hoping for a big Hollywood retelling of Milk’s story, so that the impact of his life and his, yes, community organizing could move not only straight audiences but also new generations of young gays who might never have heard of him.
As the saying goes, be careful what you wish for.
“Milk” brings the politician’s story to life, but it almost mechanically ticks off all the moments you’d expect to see in a biopic. (Early defeats, check; candidate discovers his voice and builds coalition, check; loved one urges hero to reconsider putting himself through yet another campaign, check.) Watching director Gus Van Sant tamp down everything that makes him interesting as a filmmaker to make a big mainstream movie is rather disheartening, although he’s outdone by screenwriter Dustin Lance Black, who apparently clicked the “Biopic” button in his Final Draft software and then just filled in the names.
|
Armed with an ever-growing coterie of activists, Harvey runs for the board of supervisors twice and for state assembly once without success. When the San Francisco map is redistricted, however, it appears that Harvey will finally be able to win, even though Scott walks out, saying he can’t endure another election. Once he takes office, Harvey is able to battle Anita Bryant’s national anti-gay crusade in California, never knowing that it would be one of his last great acts before his tragic assassination.
|
Sean Penn’s performance is already being overrated to the skies, but it’s merely adequate; if you’ve seen “The Times of Harvey Milk” — and if you haven’t, do so, immediately — you know that the real guy was much funnier and more charismatic than Penn’s adenoidal creation. It’s Franco who really steals the show, turning a two-dimensional trope into a real human being, and his exit from the story is deeply felt. Also noteworthy are the brief supporting turns by Emile Hirsch and Josh Brolin, as well as the work of cinematographer Harris Savides, who does as much as the wigmaker and the wardrobe crew to give “Milk” a very 1978 look.
If “Milk” moves people in this post-Proposition 8 era to open their minds about gay people in American society, or if it inspires those gay people to take to the streets to fight for their rights, then blessings upon it. All I know is that I can never get through “Times of Harvey Milk” without a handkerchief, while Van Sant’s “Milk” left me forlornly dry-eyed.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM AT THE MOVIES |
| Add At the movies headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links
Resource guide





