Milk Movie Review
Milk Review
"Milk" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Gus Van SantProducer : Michael London,Bruna Papandrea,William Horberg
Screenwiter : Dustin Lance Black
Starring : Sean Penn,Allison Pill,Josh Brolin,Emile Hirsch,James Franco
Thirty years before Sen. Barack Obama broke through a significant political
color barrier, Harvey Milk tore down a similar wall that was obstructing
America's gay community from holding political office.
Milk finds experimental auteur Gus Van Sant taking cautious steps back toward
the mainstream to celebrate Harvey's accomplishments. Van Sant's tender
human-interest story, which showcases Sean Penn's considerable talents, is a
closer relative to earlier efforts such as Finding Forrester or Good Will
Hunting than to recent, abstruse features like Elephant, the spare Gerry, or
the haunting Last Days.
The director opens Milk with sobering news footage announcing the influential
politician's murder before rewinding to record the highlights of his life. Most
came during a seven-year stretch from 1972-'78, when the 40-year-old
camera-store owner (Penn, buried in the role) established himself as the voice
of San Francisco's oppressed, disgruntled, and frightened gay community.
Someone once dubbed Harvey the Mayor of North Castro, though Penn, in
character, jokes he might have came up with the title himself.
From the sanctuary of his humble office in San Fran's liberal Castro
neighborhood, Milk launched a series of grassroots campaigns to become the
first openly gay man to be elected to public office. Change didn't happen
overnight. Milk lost repeatedly but refused to quit, for each election cycle
offered a glimmer of hope -- an increase in the number of votes received, or a
possible rezoning of districts that would open up favorable neighborhoods. It
took several tries before Milk finally broke through the invisible barrier and
became an elected member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in 1977.
At its best, Milk illustrates how political movements can be born of
frustration, and how easy it is for groups of strangers to find unity and
strength in numbers. A magnetic Penn leads a powerful ensemble -- Milk is,
above all else, an acting showcase for the raw talents of Emile Hirsch, Alison
Pill, and an underused Victor Garber as Mayor George Moscone. Two additional
performances deserve recognition. James Franco is compassionate and supportive
as Scott Smith, Milk's longtime lover who served as his campaign manager until
the stress of campaigning drove a wedge between the men. And Josh Brolin
continues his astounding streak to play Dan White, a fellow supervisor whose
differences with Harvey drove him to murder.
Yet Milk has some flaws. Dustin Lance Black's script has a tendency to keep
redefining Milk's battles, which are clear from the film's onset. A strained
romance between Penn and Diego Luna becomes tedious, not tumultuous. The nod to
Puccini's opera Tosca (you can't miss it) is extremely heavy-handed. And this
is strange to say about a film centered on an outspoken politician, but Van
Sant allows Milk to bog down in politics, and the film's rhythm suffers as a
result.
Milk also bears the sin of manipulation, from the swells Danny Elfman's warm
and full-bodied score to the wheelchair-bound teenager who calls Milk with
words of encouragement when things get rough. The movie's message is strong
enough. So are the performances. Van Sant didn't have to rely on cinematic
tricks.
With all due respect to president-elect Obama, Milk also illustrates how little
things have changed. Thirty years after Milk's assassination, America's gay
community continues to fight for its civil rights. The passing of California
Proposition 8, which eliminated the rights of gay men and women to marry,
proved that state -- and the rest of the country -- has a long way to go to
realize Milk's vision. What about movie audiences? Will they show support for a
crowd-pleasing Oscar-baiter about a progressive gay politician? Box office
figures may help answer that in due time.
Milk and champagne? Hmmm...
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Review by Sean O'Connell
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