Monday, February 23, 2009

Milk - My Pick for Best Picture of the Year (Spoilers)

Bear with me. This is going to be a long post and it is going to involve my soapbox, because Harvey Milk loved his soapbox and wanted us all to use ours.

First, the movie itself was phenomenal. I knew who Harvey Milk was, but not all the details of his story. The story is powerful, inspirational and heartbreaking. Sean Penn fully and completely became Harvey Milk in this film. The rest of the cast was also superb, including James Franco, Emile Hirsche and Josh Brolin. (And on a side note, this movie made me want to get back up to San Francisco). The love story between Milk and Scott Smith was also inspirational. Although tumultuous, their love for each other never ended, even when they were no longer together. The role of Scott was played amazingly well by James Franco.




The other person I fell in love with was Cleve Jones. Emile Hirsche did a great job in this role, I love the picture above of Emile with the real Cleve Jones. The most poignant scene of the whole movie came after his death, when tens of thousands of people marched to city hall, all carrying candles. The streets were FULL of people. This is where the tears started coming. I really appreciated that they showed us original footage of this march so we could see the enormity of the outpouring of love for Harvey. He was not just loved by the GLBT community, but by many groups in San Francisco because he was always championing the rights of the little people. I also really give a lot of credit to Josh Brolin for his portrayal of Dan White, the assassin of Harvey Milk and Mayor Moscone. It can't have been an easy role to take on, and he played it fabulously. It was understated, but you could really see the hate beginning to brew within him because he didn't receive the acclaim and power that Milk received.







Now for my soapbox. The parallels to what is happening today in the struggle for equal rights are obvious and abundant. Harvey Milk campaigned tirelessly for the end of discrimination and made huge strides in San Francisco, California and the United States. He inspired a generation of people to come out of the closet and embrace their identity. During Milk's service as Supervisor he had to fight a proposition aimed at taking away gay rights. Prop 6 was sponsored by an assemblyman from Orange County (shocker!) and was majorly funded my church groups, specifically evangelical Christians. (Sound familiar?). This prop would have taken away the right for an openly gay person or anyone that supported them to teach in public schools. It was basically a witch hunt bill. At first the bill was shown to win, but through Milk and thousands like him our state ended up voting no on that prop and many other anti-gay initiatives that followed. That is until Prop 22 passed banning gay marriage and now of course Prop 8, banning gay marriage in our constitution.

I am also disgusted that the story of Harvey Milk is not taught in public schools nationwide. His story is not just about gay rights, but about the struggle in this country for civil rights for all people. Leaving out the history of the first openly gay man elected to public office is inexcusable. There was a bill passed in our state legislature last year to create a Harvey Milk day where schools would teach about Milk and we could celebrate his life, but it was vetoed. The Evangelical/Mormon movement came out against it in full force, calling it a "Gay Day". Our Governor bowed under the pressure. Shame on him.

Why are we regressing? Why are we again listening to the hateful rants of a few religious people instead of overwhelming message of love? What this movie taught me is that we did not fight hard enough. When people forget history we are doomed to repeat it, and we did not remind people enough of the history of gay rights in this country. We didn't promote love and banish hate enough. I blame myself for not being more active. I could have given more money than I did. I could have passed out campaign literature. I could have attended rallies. My small monetary donations and painting No on 8 on my car were not nearly enough, and I know that now. If the current lawsuits do not overturn Prop 8 you can bet your life that I will be campaigning long and hard to overturn this amendment during the next election. Harvey Milk was and is an inspiration to all people, not just GLBT Americans. He taught us that you have to fight for Civil Rights and that the fight is worth it. He taught us that love always wins over hate and that all people really truly are created equal.

Last night at the Oscar's, a young openly gay Dustin Lance Black won for best Original Screenplay and his speech made me tear up. The producers, director, Sean Penn and Black all wore white knots symbolizing the struggle for gay rights. I loved that he said:

"When I was 13 years old, my beautiful mother and my father moved me from a
conservative Mormon home in San Antonio, Texas, to California, and I heard the
story of Harvey Milk. And it gave me hope. It gave me the hope to live my life;
it gave me the hope that one day I could live my life openly as who I am and
that maybe even I could fall in love and one day get married. . . .
Most of all, if Harvey had not been taken from us 30 years ago, I think he’d want me to say to all of the gay and lesbian kids out there tonight who have been told they
are less than by their churches, or by the government, or by their families,
that you are beautiful, wonderful creatures of value. And that no matter what
everyone tells you, God does love you, and that very soon, I promise you, you
will have equal rights federally across this great nation of ours."

And of course Sean Penn won for His amazing acting job. Those "commie homo loving sons of guns" did the right thing and gave the most deserving man the Oscar. Penn joked that it is not always easy to appreciate him, which is true LOL I think he has a huge heart and sometimes his good intentions are a little, well, over the top and actually have the opposite effect. His speech last night hit the perfect note though, and I am very very happy about his win.

I think Harvey Milk would have been proud and ready to continue fight for marriage equality and equal rights in this country. And I truly believe that in my lifetime gay marriage will be legal in all 50 states.

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