MILK
When it comes to biopics, MILK doesn't exactly break the mold. It's got flashbacks, stock footage, the entire character arc... it certainly doesn't try the risky things that I'M NOT THERE tried last year. But when a story is as compelling and as moving as the life of Harvey Milk is, you don't have to do a whole lot of storytelling tricks. You just hire some terrific actors, get a truly great director like Gus Van Sant (GOOD WILL HUNTING, LAST DAYS), write a funny, warm, and emotional script, and then just go nuts. Granted, those are pretty difficult things to do on their own. But with MILK, we get all that and a resonant political message too. I'll get to that in a bit, because it's the one thing that made me angry about the movie.
I don't want to rehash the plot too much, as it should be familiar with everyone by now. But I was astonished in many ways by Sean Penn's performance as Milk, not the least of which was his genuine warmth and heart. Penn's played dark and conflicted for a while now, and his Milk doesn't have a lot in common with his other characters. If anything, Penn's Milk reminded me of his first major character, Jeff Spicoli. Each of those share an endless optimism, and like Spicoli Penn is very funny in this as well. He doesn't play Milk as a martyr. This was not a man who wanted to die - Harvey Milk loved life and looked forward to a new day every morning. One of my favorite scenes had Milk attending a christening for another city supervisor Dan White (Josh Brolin) and his endless curiosity about being exposed to another aspect of human life. And yet, Harvey Milk is proud of being gay and refuses to feel guilty about it. As Penn plays him, Milk uses humor to diffuse tension, but he also knows when not to back down from a fight when he or his way of life is threatened.
Josh Brolin turns in another amazing performance in a row as Dan White, Milk's eventual assassin. He could have played him as a simple bigot, but Brolin plays him as a complicated, conflicted man, and the film hints that he may be gay-repressed as well. It is a sympathetic performance and yet makes no excuses for his actions. Another of my favorite scenes is when White invites Milk to his child's christening, and after Milk's friends berate him for agreeing to come, Milk tells them that to get the support of the straight community, they must be willing to engage them and show them that they aren't a threat to their beliefs. Which brings me to my final point, and why I'm angry.
This film could have built bridges had it been released earlier. Yes, MILK is upfront with its characters sexuality, and it doesn't shy away from it. And at the same time, it shows us as an audience that these people have the same goals and passions as everyone else - to live their lives free from persecution, to have good jobs, to find love, to raise a family. The film even makes a hilarious point - straight or gay, no one likes stepping in dog shit. The heinous law that is Proposition 8 passed because of people's fear of the unknown, and here is a film that makes it plain as day - the gay community isn't going away and we should all try a little empathy and understand each other a little bit, and not to be guided by dogma from people who have no interest in anything except to make more money for their churches and to marginalize people into groups that hate each other. This is a film that should have been released much earlier than it did. I think even Harvey Milk would agree with that, and he wouldn't have minded the exposure, either.
This year's seen a lot of superhero movies - DARK KNIGHT, HANCOCK, IRON MAN - and in my opinion, MILK is the best superhero movie of the year. I'm not being glib, or trying to sound glib. Genuine heroes are few and far between and we need to celebrate them when they come along. MILK isn't dwelling on his death - it celebrates his life. Definitely a must-see.

