continued.......
Terribly unhappy as a woman named Teena Brandon, Brandon Teena
was someone who'd cut her hair boyishly short and took to wearing loose-fitting
flannel shirts. She became adept at "strapping and packing," flattening
her breasts and stuffing socks down her pants--someone who so succeeded in gender
disguise that it's difficult to talk about her without feeling that "him"
is the more appropriate pronoun.
Based on the agonizing true story of a fatally deceptive life, Boys Don't Cry
is an exceptional--and exceptionally disturbing--film from a first-time director
and writer (with Andy Bienen) named Kimberly Pierce. Unflinching, uncompromising,
made with complete conviction and rare skill, this Middle American "M.
Butterfly" is a passionate story about the price of dreams, a story that
goes into a world few of us know and comes out with a drama we all can find
a place in.
For who has not fantasized about being somehow different than we are, thinner,
more glamorous, more appealing. But, as minorities of all stripes have always
known, being different can cut two ways. And because Brandon Teena's fantasy
involved transsexualism--not just seducing women but actually being a man--she
put herself in the zone where difference is dangerous, where departure from
the norm can inspire fear and revulsion.
It's because of this gift for taking a very specific story
and giving it universal resonances that the savage but sometimes wistful Boys
Don't Cry is as powerful, and as wrenching, as it is. And without Hilary Swank's
astonishing performance as Brandon Teena, the film's success would not be possible.
What Swank, a young actress previously seen in Buffy the Vampire Slayer and
The Next Karate Kid, accomplishes is nothing like the Victor/Victoria-type stunt
it may appear to be. Just as Brandon Teena took her deception further than anyone
could have anticipated, so Swank, in a piercing performance, makes us complicit
in the agony and glee of Brandon's days and nights, letting us share in the
strangeness, the bravado and the yearning desire to connect of this secret life
on the edge. It's a bravura piece of work that not only lets us see how the
real Brandon convinced so many people she was a man, it just about convinces
us of the same thing even though we know the truth from the outset.
Boys Don't Cry starts out in 1993 in Lincoln, Neb., Brandon's hometown. There,
he persists in going out on dates with impressionable young women even though
some local men are riled up enough about his methods to attack the trailer he
crashes in with his cousin Lonny (Matt McGrath.)
"You're not a boy," Lonny screams, but Brandon, impervious
to harsh logic, just grins and says, "Then how come they say I'm the best
boyfriend they ever had?" Soft-spoken, thoughtful, considerate, quick with
compliments and small gifts, Brandon certainly seems like the kind of dreamy
guy not often found in those parts.
That's certainly what Candace (Alicia Goranson) thinks when she chats up Brandon
in that Lincoln bar, and her grungy pals John (Peter Sarsgaard) and Tom (Brendan
Sexton III) initially share her good opinion as they watch Candace's new friend,
never at a loss for nerve, throw himself into a fight with a much larger man.
These folks live in Falls City, a hamlet that makes Lincoln seem like Manhattan.
They invite Brandon to hang out there and he agrees because the absence of people
who know him makes it easier to do the one thing that lends a measure of pure
ecstasy to life's most ordinary events, and that is acting out the pretense
of maleness.
If there is a key element to Swank's characterization, it's the quick and ready
hypnotic grin she uses to convey the sheer mind-bending joy Brandon felt when
the deception was going well and everyone was fooled. Getting people, men as
well as women, to treat him like a guy makes Brandon so pleased with himself
he can barely stand it. He's in fact so heedlessly jazzed by what he's pulling
off that he can't be bothered to see how much he's in over his head, to recognize
the frightening position his fantasy life has placed him in.
Upping the ante is Brandon's love-at-first-sight crush on Lana (played with
haunting immediacy by the versatile Chloe Sevigny, a teenager with a sick-of-it-all
attitude who is romantically connected to John but whom Brandon immediately
covets. Swank and director Pierce are especially good at creating empathy for
Brandon, even when he acts with such utter foolishness he doesn't deserve it,
and that concern for character, that refusal to typecast, refreshingly extends
to John and Tom, who turn out to be an increasing unstable and violent pair
of ex-cons.
All this is harder to accomplish because, as one character says and anyone who's
seen the documentary "The Brandon Teena Story" can testify, Brandon's
crowd in Falls City is part of a white trash world, where people mutilate themselves
out of boredom, drink themselves into unconsciousness and genuinely believe
there is good money to be made in singing karaoke.
Helped by Jim Denault's truth-captured-on-the-fly neo-documentary cinematography,
director Pierce and Bienen and the expert cast engage us in the actuality of
these rootless, hopeless, stoned-out lives without sentimentalizing or romanticizing
them. The actors are especially adept at adding enough of their own innate inner
lights to bring a level of interest to characters who in reality might not have
had much at all.
One thing Boys Don't Cry doesn't do is soft-pedal the painful and horrifying
aspects of Brendan's story; we share his lacerating journey right to its dark
end. Unlike scenarios that play at disturbance, this film, especially in its
graphic and devastating rape scene, is genuinely hard to take. Yet with an ability
to metaphorically transform harsh aspects of existence, to show us reflections
of our shared humanity in difficult, unlikely places, it enlarges our consciousness
and reminds us of the truth of the often-quoted aphorism of the Roman playwright
Terence. "I am a man," he wrote. "Nothing human is alien to me."