@@GirlLovesFairytale He slammed a reporter who called it disgusting, the clip was beautiful, he said: “I think it's an incredible shame that people go out of their way to voice their disgust or their negative opinions against the ways in which two people choose to love each other. At least voice your opinions about how two people show hate and violence and anger towards one another. I also feel like [the film] will surprise people. It's obviously about two men in love and it's obviously 'gay-themed' and it's very easily labeled, but unfotunately people are quick in life to label stuff they're uncomfortable with. Get over the fact it's two men - that's the point... We're showing that love between two men is just as infectious and emotional and strong and pure as it is with heterosexual love. And if you can't understand it, just don't go see the movie. We don't care. Deal with it in your own private life. Don't voice it out. We don't want to know." - Heath Ledger
I hate how people didn’t take this movie seriously, and how people made it the center of most homophobic jokes because it’s really beautiful acting and a beautiful story. Also Rest In Peace heath ledger
I mean, it has come to be a cult classic. And that's often times better than a movie being big when it came out only to then fade away like Call me by your name.
@@a.nastasia.olivia I think the recent incidents involving Armie Hammer have hurt its legacy. I know a lot of people that will never watch it again because of that. And I also know a lot of people that didn't think it was all that great in the first place even when it originally came out. My personal opinion is that there is a lot of undeserved hype surrounding that movie and media like that usually doesn't stand the test of time. I also think some of the attention it gets is simply because it is one of the few lgbt themed movies that went mainstream in such a big way, but with time as more (and better) lgbt movies are made, it won't hold that special position anymore. Or at least one can hope. We definitely need better, more positive representations of lgbt relationships in mainstream media. We've definitely had enough of sob stories.
@@REDnBLACKnRED I can attest to when I watched it at 15 when it came out in cinema I was beyond confused the entire time. My two friends also really dislike it and the thought of it makes them really uncomfortable. I also have another friend who recently got a tattoo of it so it’s still very divided. I personally don’t understand why people enjoy the movie as much as they like to rave about it and no one’s really explained to me why they like it so much. Like I said I was just confused more than anything. I couldn’t really follow the storyline but I never had a distaste to it like the friends I went to see it with did. I also recently rewatched it through a yt reaction vid and still just come out of that film confused lolll.
@@dannielliebear5269 I personally just found it, above anything else, boring. It's so slow! Don't get me wrong, its beautifully shot and I can appreciate good cinematography, but the story is bland as a 5 day old piece of stale white bread. As for uncomfortable, in hindsight, the fact that the main character was a minor who was somewhat preyed on by an older foreign man definitely doesn't sit well. But that's part of what people romanticise, which is disturbing to say the least. And the infamous peach scene, as much as an allegory as it was, to me isn't romantic whatsoever. Different strokes for different folks I suppose. But I definitely don't think it will go down as a classic.
I think Anne's character lied about how Jack died because there's no way to publicly tell the truth about it without ALSO raising too many questions about exactly WHY that group of men beat him to death. Her family likely insisted on lying about the method of death in order to avoid a scandal, or any judgment being cast on her for being married to "one of THOSE people." So poor Jack, who wanted nothing more than to live openly, honestly, and without shame, is forced into a lie even in death.
Can you imagine a sequel where Anne gets a gun and an aluminum bat and tracks down every one of those men and beats each to death (or better yet devises traps for them after she beats the first one to death).
the director of the film actually intended the ending to be open for interpretation. it could either mean what you said or it could mean that he actually died the way she said he did. and the vision of jack getting killed is what he imagined happened because of the thing he saw as a child about the brutal killing of that gay man .
Brad, my dear, I'm a queer man who grew up in rural Mormon Utah in the 60s and 70s and heard horror stories not too different from this. I saw the movie in the cinema once in 2005, and have NEVER been able to watch it again - it pierced my heart so deeply. I and many, many others will never consider the trash that won "Best Picture" that year as legitimate. As much queer influence as there was in Hollywood even back then, most of the stuckup conservative Academy members couldn't stomach the idea of a gay best picture
And it's even more heartbreaking to know that it's still happening around the globe (the killing of queer people, just for that fact) and even in some friendly LGBT+ countries.
I heard those same horror stories in the midwest in the same time frame that you mentioned. It seemed my whole life was surrounded by prudes and haters. Anyhow, I appreciate your response to Brokeback. I have watched it more than once because it reminds me---only in the broadest of contours---of my First Beloved, and a very special summer we spent together. Brokeback was the best picture of the year, regardless of what the Academy decided, and it is probably the best picture of its decade.
The way Ennis speaks was an acting decision Heath made to show repressed emotions through body language. Me being from Texas I've sadly met men like this who were not necessarily gay, but forced into this mold where they eventually repressed alot of themselves.
this movie got memed on so hard by homophobes ever since it came out and it's sad cause it was such a heart wrenching story.. it was way ahead of its time tbh!! if it had come out now i think it would be a smash hit
It's a GREAT movie that was totally robbed by a bunch of homophobic bigots at the Oscars. Don't forget, every member gets to vote on Best Picture. Anyway, a lot of younger gay people have issues with certain parts of the film but don't forget its time frame is early 1960s. Heath and Jake were freaking BRILLIANT!!!
Growing up, in my family this was always just "the gay cowboy movie" and that's what i always thought. Now that I'm very happy, confident and solidified in my queer trans identity, i wish everyone could watch this movie cause its so much move than a queer story. It has so many layers and meanings. Definitely top 3 for sure.
I actually love Jack's wife I feel like she knows and she finds a good friend in him. I feel like as long as she has a kind husband that is a good dad and her business is going she doesn't give a fuck.
she absolutely minded. They were clearly having problems and lived an estranged marriage. Maybe she kind of understood why Jack was behaving the way he did. It didn't take away from the shame of not being loved and cared for by her husband whom she had put everything in her life at risk for (since she came from a business family and Jack was basically a bit of a "slacker" and trying to find himself) including her relationship with her parents. Everyone in that town must have known or suspected smth was up and Jack was, tormented or not, pretty unempathetic and selfish at times. She had over time just numbed to the situation and endured it. The movie did a fantastic job of also making the wife characters multi-dimensional and very human. It showed that nobody in those relationships was gonna win, everyone was suffering - that it was just a shit situation because those men were trapped within the confinements of what society back then allowed them.
I saw this when it came out in the theater. And when the film ended, all you could hear was sniffing from people crying. But how he covered Jack's shirt with his to keep it safe was a beautiful way to end it.
My best female friend and I were on our way back from seeing it in NYC, when I just broke down about it, on the bus ride home. I couldn't stop crying. My friend didn't understand what was wrong. I've never ugly cried harder in public in my life. That fucking shirt and Ennis' face.
I think that the reason why Anne Hathaway's character "lied" because she wanted to protect Ennis from the truth of how Jack actually died because I think that she knew that Ennis was Jack's lover.
I can't even watch people react to this without crying! I watch this movie every year because it's just so beautiful and telling of a very specific queer experience. It hurts every time because I know this is so many peoples story and so many people still don't take it seriously and that absolutely wrecks me. So many people joke about this film, including people in the queer community and that devastates me. Queer folks from the past that are no longer alive don't deserve to be mocked. This is just one example of how to observe and honor their experience. It's so important as queer people to understand what our past was and what it is now. Thanks for reacting to this, Brad! You're hilarious and lovely.
In that closing scene, someone pointed out to me that it is Jack's shirt underneath Ennis's shirt which is so symbolic. Yes, I cried a river when this first came out. I suspect, given this all started in 1963 (I was only 8 years of age then), the portrayal of the times and attitudes are pretty much spot on. It wasn't easy in the 1970s. It could not have been easy in the 1960s, either.
When Jack craddles Ennis in his arms after he tells Ennis, "I wish I could quit you!"... feeling Ennis's unending struggle and inner pain, overwhelms every time!😭
even though ang lee won the oscar for directing at the 2006 oscars, i will forever be mad that brokeback lost best picture to _crash_ of all movies (it's a good film but nowhere near the other nominees that year). also, personally i feel like heath should've won an oscar for this instead of the dark knight (as iconic as his joker was, imo he was better and more nuanced in brokeback and deserved the recognition). and that means that he would've received an oscar when he was still alive and would've seen how admired he was as a person and an actor 🥲 wish he was still with us today to see how truly impactful this movie has become p.s. if you REALLY wanna bawl your eyes out, watch the documentary "i am heath ledger" - one of my fav movies ever and it has so much insight into what heath was like as a person and just overall is a fantastic piece of media ❤️
Crash is not a good movie, though. It's actually pretty terrible. It won the Oscar only because Hollywood would be made to burn to the ground before allowing a gay-themed movie to win back then. That's the one and only reason why Trash, I mean Crash won. Nobody gives a fuck about that movie nowadays for a reason.
Ok, storytime. I used to have fights on Yahoo groups and things like that about this film when it first came out, because I think people buy into this mythological concept of the cowboy iconic, because of John Wayne films and the like... when really, the gayness just flew rampant out there (and still does to an extent,) under the surface. So, yeah. When this movie came out, I went to the theater and I saw it like five times, because I just couldn't deal with the ending, and I guess subconsciously I believed that if I kept going back, it would change, or something? And I'm from a very rural area, close to where these were filmed, where attitudes really haven't changed much, & I remember the last time I went to see it, a 50-ish lady came in there with her 60-ish husband... and he had his hat on inside the building. In that area of the world, wearing your hat indoors is a sign that you are entirely disrespecting everything that is going on around you, because taking your hat off is a sign of respect for the venue (especially in a movie theater, because it's just rude to keep it on and block people's view)... so the fact that he was coming in there but refusing to take his hat off was his making a statement that he was there under protest, that he didn't want to be there, he didn't want to see this, he was pissed off that his wife was taking him to this film. They watched the movie in silence... & at the end, when Ennis had exchanged the shirts so that his shirt was embracing Jack's shirt and he said those last words.... finally, there in front of me, that hat came off, and the man put his fingers to his eyes, and his wife poked him with her elbow in the side and hissed, "See, I told you". And I knew that it had got him, and it had changed his views, and I was I will never forget that, because that's how powerful this film is.
this storytime just rly made all the homophobic jokes somewhat worth it. to know this film was made, despite controversy, to just showcase love and open the eyes of ppl. simply brilliant
Plssss watch “but I’m a cheerleader”!! It’s about a closeted lesbian who doesn’t realize it until she’s sent to a conversion camp. It’s really eye opening to the way parts of different religions see gay people and how they aren’t always accepted. I love u and that movie sooo much 🌈🌈💕💕
I remember being 9 and knowing I was gay, I had no clue how to tell my dad or anyone so i had to toughen up and just bury it deep down. This movie made me cry like a baby at the end 😢 love this reaction 🖤✊🏽
Everyone talks about the beans but imagine riding a horse for hours after that. On another note, Pedro Almodóvar was set to direct this movie but had creative differences with the studio. This year he is filming a short movie with Ethan Hawke (a sheriff) and Pedro Pascal (an outlaw) as lovers that reunite after 25 years. It will make for the perfect sad double feature.
I saw this when it came out when I was almost 30. It was a very special experience, and an incredible film. But I am thankful that now have options other than the usual gay trauma now. It was depressing coming of age in the '90s and early 2000's. All of our representation was either a joke of incredibly depressing.
Yep. Same. Going from something like this to things like Heartstopper today just amazes me how far we've come. And then I look at the anti-LGBTQ attacks going on in places like Florida (where I live) and it saddens me how much farther we still have to go.
I've watched this film not too long ago, and I was like "Heath is in it, and I know there's romance, it's going to be a nice movie"... It was indeed a nice movie, despite the fact that after I finished it I was so devastated about the ending that I've remained sad for hours that day 🙈
The kitchen scene was intense. But Ennis attacked her first. When she told him he should get married again, his response was, "Well, once burned." He burned her. She didn't burn him. And even after he grabbed her & threatened to beat her, she did not tell their daughters or her husband about him and Jack. 😎 Enjoyed your reaction. My husband and I went to see Brokeback in the theater, in 2005. Left us emotionally numb for a couple of days.
God, I miss Heath Ledger. My daughters and I were just talking about him over Thanksgiving. He was so gifted. The scene at the end with Jack's shirt shattered me.
Okay, first of all, great reaction video!!! And 2nd, I have to share a memory I'd forgotten that watching this made me remember: When I was growing up, my parents were homophobic. No "burning in hell" or outward hate, but they were intolerant and regarded it as shameful and unnatural (which unfortunately helped keep me in the closet for a long time). Today, they are MUCH better, especially in speaking up for gay rights and equity. But back when Brokeback came out, my mom had advanced some, but my dad was still pretty stuck in his old mindset. Then one day, I'm over at their house, and my dad (who is also very country and with a thick southern accent), says, "You know, I thought I'd give that Brokeback Mountain movie a try. Especially since I really like that Jake kid." * *me as time freezes, trying not to look too shocked 😮* * "And you know what? That is a really, really good movie." * *now probably failing not to look shocked but doing my best 😳* * "But its just so sad, you know? Jack just wanted them to have a life together. And Ennis, he was just scared is all. Especially after what his father did. And then they go an kill poor Jack! Just for being gay. That's not right. And poor Ennis, he'll probably never love anybody else for the rest of his life." * 🥺🥺😭 * "Yeah, its still really good tho, even if its sad. I've watched it a few times now." * 💀💀💀 *
omg I just watched this movie because you referenced it when you were watching heartstopper and nick was trying to find a lgbt movie to watch with his mom. can’t wait to watch. ❤️
I always took Jacks dad saying he would be buried in the family plot as a sign he loved his son, he may not have agreed with his lifestyle, but regardless he loved him and would always consider him family, and hence wanted him buried where he belonged (in his view).
so the reason it’s really difficult to tell whether Jack’s wife knows that Ennis and Jack were together is because Anne Hathaway has said that they shot two versions of the scene one where she knew, and one where she didn’t. she was told they did that because they hadn’t decided which one they were gonna go with for the final film. she says the final cut is actually a mixture of the two takes hence why it’s hard to read whether she’s sad about her husband, or angry/jealous about talking to the man he was cheating on her with (if i remember the interview correctly she actually said she THINKS it a mix of the two she may not have been sure) also the scene of jack getting beaten to death is possibly meant to be in Ennis’ head, the point is that while Jack’s wife may have been told one story there is a very real possibility that he was beaten to death for being queer, but also that if his death was just an accident/‘senseless’, it makes sense Ennis would have a hard time grappling with that and might assume it was a beating because then at least you have a reason for why he died
this movie is literally everything, i always recommend to every friend who asks for movies recommendations!!! iconic, i miss heath i was a very big fan, always watched every single movie he did! this is a bittersweat movie for sure
First of all the edits are funny. This is my first video of yours to watch. Answer to question: Why does this movie have to end on such a downer? Easily answered. It doesn’t. After decades together and one gone to heaven, what more do you want? Ennis isn’t going to go to Fire Island and NYC and be a party favor or daddy. Ennis is closed, insular, brooding, with very little tolerance for emotion. When I first saw this, I saw some twink queen pretend to wipe his eyes at the end like he understood the gravity of what he just saw. It’s only when you’ve been in love and gone thru hell together with your partner that this movie opens up like a flower and let’s you peer into it’s true power. You might be a bit too young, a bit immature to understand Heath Ledger’s magnificent performance. I mean no disrespect, age changes people, you’ll see. I’m 43 and can see the gift this movie is to our gay community. The day your naïveté has gone, watch this again. You’ll understand. Kisses, doll.
I saw this film in the cinema in Manchester when it first came out, and I saw people coming out of the showing before mine crying, so I went to the restroom and got plenty of tissue from the toilet rolls to wipe my eyes with in case I ended up crying too, which I did. It is a really good film, so it was worth the tears.
I just watched this movie for the first time today and it was so beautiful definitely my top 3 favourite movies ever it deserves way more credit then it does. RIP HEATH.
LOVED THIS and really love the idea of a gay film reaction series! Here are some suggestions: - Call Me by Your Name (well, duh) - Love, Simon (it started the current mainstream wholesome queer storytelling trend, imo) - Moonlight (oscar winner!) - The Normal Heart (aids crisis in 80s NYC... must watch!) - God's Own Country (the "British version" of Brokeback Mountain...) - The Boys in the Band (shows how gay people lived in the 60s, the whole cast is queer) The list goes on and on... Even if you don't post a reaction, I feel every gay boy needs to se these at least once!
I was very young when i first watched this movie (i had borrowed a bunch of movies from our local video store, picking this specifically because i had heard about the ‘outrage’ and was curious) and i vividly remember just bawling through most of it. My mom got worried when i got downstairs looking like a total wreck lol. It’s a stunning movie. The acting is so good, it’s shot wonderfully and i can’t listen to that soundtrack without tearing up. It’s not a something i want to rewatch. It’s too painful and upsetting but i do think it’s a very important movie. Thank you for the wonderful video Brad! ❤️
I've only seen that movie once in my life. I watched it with my mom and my sister. I was still in the closet but my mom kind of knew I was gay and it was the most awkward situation that I've ever been a part of. Good God I was mortified when THAT scene started happening. It also left me traumatised so yeah. It was a proper EXPERIENCE. hahahaha
The first time a watched it i was like 17 and i was shocked, i think at the time i was not that aware of the lgbtq+ community around me since where i live is not something you talk about openly or not without it being a joke. So i watched it at a sleepover with some friends and we all fell to silence at the end. It made me feel a lot of things, i recognized instantly that it was going to be a beautiful story, but how it ended for one of the characters made me sick to my stomach, i couldnt comprehend how or why they had to suffer so much just for love. It made me tear up, it made me aware of the people around me, it woke me up to be gentle and respectful. It hurt, but it was worth it. Ps. I love your reactions!! I was wondering if you have ever watched a BL Thai drama? If not, allow me to recommend KinnPorsche, its a very good one, and i think its helping Thai BL grow and be recognized more. Thanks!!
okay if we're checking off iconic movies with queer characters, lets do Perks of Being a Wallflower next, i beg!!!! (it ends happy-sad, like it hurts ur heart but you love it)
Like many short story adaptations, this is really faithful to Annie Proulx’s story of the same name. Brilliant writing, as is the screenplay by McMurtry and Ossana.
You look so cute in your cowboy hat! This movie gutted me when I watched it like 15 years ago already (fml I’m old) when I was 15. Haven’t been able to watch it since but it truly is a beautiful and heartbreaking film.
OK so when I clicked on this video I was so excited and all but now we are less than a minute into the movie and I'm getting too vulnerable already the movie is beautifully made it makes me emotional even when I'm not at the sad scenes
THE MOMENT THIS SHOWED UP ON MY FEED. I literally watched this movie a couple of months ago while watching old gay movies and after finishing it was sad that not many people watched it nowadays and hen Brad rolls in with this video... istg... godsent
If you want to see a really good series with LGBTQ content, I can warmly recommend Sense8. You need to give it more than one episode because the first episode is confusing.
I don't think she lied , is just think heath's character always had the image of "guys like them " to die like how his father showed him when he was young , so when she was saying how he died , for heath's character the only way was for someone to find out that they are gay and attack jack's character the same way that his father showed him
You said try not to cry, and I failed horribly. I started crying as Heath stepped out of the truck in the first 2 dang seconds of your video; he was and still is my favorite human being ever
I watched the movie two or three times but I still don’t know how I feel about it. It is beautiful and so sad at the same time. I understand it’s in the sixties and homosexuality was still considered a mental illness but look at what happened, not only Jack and Ennis suffered but two other women got hurt because they had to get married… and the saddest part of it is that it still exists. If it wasn’t for you I wouldn’t have watched it 😢 Now I’m depressed I need to go watch your heartstopper réactions 🥰
The times were different back then. I'm 65 now, and I was married to a woman for 11 yrs from 1977-1988....I asked for the divorce because I was miserable and ready to come out....but when my employer of the past decade found out I was gay, they fired me....so...there are reasons for how we dealt with the homophobia of those times...not to mention that AIDS was killing off all of our gay friends right and left for the next decade after coming out......so, being married to a woman probably saved my life. I am so lucky to have a daughter and a granddaughter who love me and were raised to understand and love LGBT people. Our paths are not always easy, nor direct to our goals...but we did the best we could back then and got through it.
The first time I watched was late at night with my bestie his parents were away from home alot so we had a few sleepovers. Seeing it on Netflix that fateful sleepover just added to my gayness and I was happy. I cried a whole lot at the end.
I thoroughly enjoyed watching this with you. It made me less sad. I have watched this film over a dozen times and sobbed each time 😢. You are a joy to watch ❤
As much as this is a beautiful story, and a wonderfully acted movie, I hate this film for one particular reason, a lot of guys I've met think this is what true gay love looks like. It isn't. The love shown in this movie is often times violent, abusive, and harmful. An abusive relationship is often mistaken for a passionate one. It shouldn't be like this in real life. Certainly not in this day and age where you can be out and have healthy, normal relationships (edit - at least in some parts of the world).
That's only because we barely had any representation in movies back then, in mainstream movies at least. Now that's changed, fortunately, and people can find all types of lgtbq+ stories.
I hope me saying this won't make you feel uncomfortable or anything but I'm in a little bit of a stressful time in my life right now, I have to be on the run the whole day, anyway so you liking my comments and replying to one of them bacame the highlight of my day and made me so happy and gave me energy to go on with the rest of the day. Thx ❤️ (side note : I did panic like "OMG HE JUST REPLIED TO MY COMMENT" kind of situation)
The last phone call between Ennis and Lureen was actually shot multiple times for Anne Hathaway to portray more approaches. Like she knew or did not know and suspected something, so we have free interpretation of what it could really be
The whole time I was watching this, I was thinking about how much you need to react to Rina Sawayama's This Hell music video! The video production, western/cowboy/queer aesthetics, and music solidified it as THE pride anthem.
Brad you are absolutely iconic..you had me dead with the memes..well done for it crying i didn’t succeed..this is such a heartbreaking story but one of my faves ❤️🩹
Nothing is more legendary than Heath refusing to present at the Oscars because everyone was mocking Brokeback Mountain and he was furious.
I never knew this! Its a great movie and I really don't get it. Jake is also very proud of the movie still :)!
@@GirlLovesFairytale He slammed a reporter who called it disgusting, the clip was beautiful, he said:
“I think it's an incredible shame that people go out of their way to voice their disgust or their negative opinions against the ways in which two people choose to love each other. At least voice your opinions about how two people show hate and violence and anger towards one another. I also feel like [the film] will surprise people. It's obviously about two men in love and it's obviously 'gay-themed' and it's very easily labeled, but unfotunately people are quick in life to label stuff they're uncomfortable with. Get over the fact it's two men - that's the point... We're showing that love between two men is just as infectious and emotional and strong and pure as it is with heterosexual love. And if you can't understand it, just don't go see the movie. We don't care. Deal with it in your own private life. Don't voice it out. We don't want to know." - Heath Ledger
what?? he did go. Philip Seymour Hoffman won that year and you can see Heath being there lol
@@sof7152 -S’cuse, he refused to present at the Oscars with Jake 😄
They (he & Jake) were asked to present, and asked to do a bit making fun of the plot/ story, so he refused the offer for them to present.
I hate how people didn’t take this movie seriously, and how people made it the center of most homophobic jokes because it’s really beautiful acting and a beautiful story. Also Rest In Peace heath ledger
I mean, it has come to be a cult classic. And that's often times better than a movie being big when it came out only to then fade away like Call me by your name.
@@REDnBLACKnRED I don’t think call me by your name has faded at all! I’ve heard of way too many people whose life has changed because of that movie
@@a.nastasia.olivia I think the recent incidents involving Armie Hammer have hurt its legacy. I know a lot of people that will never watch it again because of that. And I also know a lot of people that didn't think it was all that great in the first place even when it originally came out. My personal opinion is that there is a lot of undeserved hype surrounding that movie and media like that usually doesn't stand the test of time. I also think some of the attention it gets is simply because it is one of the few lgbt themed movies that went mainstream in such a big way, but with time as more (and better) lgbt movies are made, it won't hold that special position anymore. Or at least one can hope. We definitely need better, more positive representations of lgbt relationships in mainstream media. We've definitely had enough of sob stories.
@@REDnBLACKnRED I can attest to when I watched it at 15 when it came out in cinema I was beyond confused the entire time. My two friends also really dislike it and the thought of it makes them really uncomfortable. I also have another friend who recently got a tattoo of it so it’s still very divided. I personally don’t understand why people enjoy the movie as much as they like to rave about it and no one’s really explained to me why they like it so much. Like I said I was just confused more than anything. I couldn’t really follow the storyline but I never had a distaste to it like the friends I went to see it with did. I also recently rewatched it through a yt reaction vid and still just come out of that film confused lolll.
@@dannielliebear5269 I personally just found it, above anything else, boring. It's so slow! Don't get me wrong, its beautifully shot and I can appreciate good cinematography, but the story is bland as a 5 day old piece of stale white bread. As for uncomfortable, in hindsight, the fact that the main character was a minor who was somewhat preyed on by an older foreign man definitely doesn't sit well. But that's part of what people romanticise, which is disturbing to say the least. And the infamous peach scene, as much as an allegory as it was, to me isn't romantic whatsoever. Different strokes for different folks I suppose. But I definitely don't think it will go down as a classic.
I think Anne's character lied about how Jack died because there's no way to publicly tell the truth about it without ALSO raising too many questions about exactly WHY that group of men beat him to death. Her family likely insisted on lying about the method of death in order to avoid a scandal, or any judgment being cast on her for being married to "one of THOSE people."
So poor Jack, who wanted nothing more than to live openly, honestly, and without shame, is forced into a lie even in death.
*sobs uncontrollably*
It’s no different than what happened when patients died of aids. The disowned people families would have them write a different cause bc of shame
Can you imagine a sequel where Anne gets a gun and an aluminum bat and tracks down every one of those men and beats each to death (or better yet devises traps for them after she beats the first one to death).
Yes, that’s the point. And Ennis knows it.
the director of the film actually intended the ending to be open for interpretation. it could either mean what you said or it could mean that he actually died the way she said he did. and the vision of jack getting killed is what he imagined happened because of the thing he saw as a child about the brutal killing of that gay man .
Brad, my dear, I'm a queer man who grew up in rural Mormon Utah in the 60s and 70s and heard horror stories not too different from this. I saw the movie in the cinema once in 2005, and have NEVER been able to watch it again - it pierced my heart so deeply. I and many, many others will never consider the trash that won "Best Picture" that year as legitimate. As much queer influence as there was in Hollywood even back then, most of the stuckup conservative Academy members couldn't stomach the idea of a gay best picture
And it's even more heartbreaking to know that it's still happening around the globe (the killing of queer people, just for that fact) and even in some friendly LGBT+ countries.
I heard those same horror stories in the midwest in the same time frame that you mentioned. It seemed my whole life was surrounded by prudes and haters. Anyhow, I appreciate your response to Brokeback. I have watched it more than once because it reminds me---only in the broadest of contours---of my First Beloved, and a very special summer we spent together. Brokeback was the best picture of the year, regardless of what the Academy decided, and it is probably the best picture of its decade.
The way Ennis speaks was an acting decision Heath made to show repressed emotions through body language.
Me being from Texas I've sadly met men like this who were not necessarily gay, but forced into this mold where they eventually repressed alot of themselves.
Brad what a trooper! Wearing a denim jacket in the middle of the heatwave in London just to fit the aesthetic of the movie.
THANK U
this movie got memed on so hard by homophobes ever since it came out and it's sad cause it was such a heart wrenching story.. it was way ahead of its time tbh!! if it had come out now i think it would be a smash hit
Omg I agree 😭😭😭
It's a GREAT movie that was totally robbed by a bunch of homophobic bigots at the Oscars. Don't forget, every member gets to vote on Best Picture. Anyway, a lot of younger gay people have issues with certain parts of the film but don't forget its time frame is early 1960s. Heath and Jake were freaking BRILLIANT!!!
Hot daddy hopper being in this movie is iconic
Growing up, in my family this was always just "the gay cowboy movie" and that's what i always thought. Now that I'm very happy, confident and solidified in my queer trans identity, i wish everyone could watch this movie cause its so much move than a queer story. It has so many layers and meanings. Definitely top 3 for sure.
i still can’t believe Heath and Jake had the s-word in the middle of a forest after they ate nothing but only beans 😭
What’s the s word?
Riiiiiiight
@@Sprinkle_sprankle98 Sex, I believe
Or sodomy lmfao
that's very brave of them honestly :D
I actually love Jack's wife I feel like she knows and she finds a good friend in him. I feel like as long as she has a kind husband that is a good dad and her business is going she doesn't give a fuck.
she absolutely minded. They were clearly having problems and lived an estranged marriage. Maybe she kind of understood why Jack was behaving the way he did. It didn't take away from the shame of not being loved and cared for by her husband whom she had put everything in her life at risk for (since she came from a business family and Jack was basically a bit of a "slacker" and trying to find himself) including her relationship with her parents. Everyone in that town must have known or suspected smth was up and Jack was, tormented or not, pretty unempathetic and selfish at times. She had over time just numbed to the situation and endured it. The movie did a fantastic job of also making the wife characters multi-dimensional and very human. It showed that nobody in those relationships was gonna win, everyone was suffering - that it was just a shit situation because those men were trapped within the confinements of what society back then allowed them.
I saw this when it came out in the theater. And when the film ended, all you could hear was sniffing from people crying. But how he covered Jack's shirt with his to keep it safe was a beautiful way to end it.
One day I hope to get through the entire movie without emptying a box of tissues.
The first time I watched this movie it destroyed me, I was grieving for like 3 days. It shook me to my souuuuul! The Shirt scene, gurl... deaded !!
My best female friend and I were on our way back from seeing it in NYC, when I just broke down about it, on the bus ride home. I couldn't stop crying. My friend didn't understand what was wrong. I've never ugly cried harder in public in my life. That fucking shirt and Ennis' face.
I understand you perfectly, I was like that for three whole weeks lmao
I think that the reason why Anne Hathaway's character "lied" because she wanted to protect Ennis from the truth of how Jack actually died because I think that she knew that Ennis was Jack's lover.
I can't even watch people react to this without crying! I watch this movie every year because it's just so beautiful and telling of a very specific queer experience. It hurts every time because I know this is so many peoples story and so many people still don't take it seriously and that absolutely wrecks me. So many people joke about this film, including people in the queer community and that devastates me. Queer folks from the past that are no longer alive don't deserve to be mocked. This is just one example of how to observe and honor their experience. It's so important as queer people to understand what our past was and what it is now. Thanks for reacting to this, Brad! You're hilarious and lovely.
"Guys I wish I was alive" Ghost Brad confirmed!
😂😂😂
Also the way I was legitamately sobbing at the end of the movie with Ennis's final lines "if I could. I swear"
*That broke me*
ALTERNATIVE THEORY: Jack prepped himself in the tent before he invited ennis to sleep there🧐
late comment but it's made fairly clear Jack has at least a little experience, both in the movie and the short story.
😭
I remember being depressed for a whole week after watching this movie
Me too cause it was a terrible movie.
@@toriboy25why do you feel that way tho
In that closing scene, someone pointed out to me that it is Jack's shirt underneath Ennis's shirt which is so symbolic. Yes, I cried a river when this first came out. I suspect, given this all started in 1963 (I was only 8 years of age then), the portrayal of the times and attitudes are pretty much spot on. It wasn't easy in the 1970s. It could not have been easy in the 1960s, either.
When Jack craddles Ennis in his arms after he tells Ennis, "I wish I could quit you!"... feeling Ennis's unending struggle and inner pain, overwhelms every time!😭
29:00 "i wish i knew how to quit you." gets me all the time 😭😭😭
even though ang lee won the oscar for directing at the 2006 oscars, i will forever be mad that brokeback lost best picture to _crash_ of all movies (it's a good film but nowhere near the other nominees that year). also, personally i feel like heath should've won an oscar for this instead of the dark knight (as iconic as his joker was, imo he was better and more nuanced in brokeback and deserved the recognition). and that means that he would've received an oscar when he was still alive and would've seen how admired he was as a person and an actor 🥲 wish he was still with us today to see how truly impactful this movie has become
p.s. if you REALLY wanna bawl your eyes out, watch the documentary "i am heath ledger" - one of my fav movies ever and it has so much insight into what heath was like as a person and just overall is a fantastic piece of media ❤️
Crash is not a good movie, though. It's actually pretty terrible. It won the Oscar only because Hollywood would be made to burn to the ground before allowing a gay-themed movie to win back then. That's the one and only reason why Trash, I mean Crash won. Nobody gives a fuck about that movie nowadays for a reason.
Ok, storytime. I used to have fights on Yahoo groups and things like that about this film when it first came out, because I think people buy into this mythological concept of the cowboy iconic, because of John Wayne films and the like... when really, the gayness just flew rampant out there (and still does to an extent,) under the surface. So, yeah. When this movie came out, I went to the theater and I saw it like five times, because I just couldn't deal with the ending, and I guess subconsciously I believed that if I kept going back, it would change, or something? And I'm from a very rural area, close to where these were filmed, where attitudes really haven't changed much, & I remember the last time I went to see it, a 50-ish lady came in there with her 60-ish husband... and he had his hat on inside the building. In that area of the world, wearing your hat indoors is a sign that you are entirely disrespecting everything that is going on around you, because taking your hat off is a sign of respect for the venue (especially in a movie theater, because it's just rude to keep it on and block people's view)... so the fact that he was coming in there but refusing to take his hat off was his making a statement that he was there under protest, that he didn't want to be there, he didn't want to see this, he was pissed off that his wife was taking him to this film. They watched the movie in silence... & at the end, when Ennis had exchanged the shirts so that his shirt was embracing Jack's shirt and he said those last words.... finally, there in front of me, that hat came off, and the man put his fingers to his eyes, and his wife poked him with her elbow in the side and hissed, "See, I told you". And I knew that it had got him, and it had changed his views, and I was I will never forget that, because that's how powerful this film is.
this storytime just rly made all the homophobic jokes somewhat worth it. to know this film was made, despite controversy, to just showcase love and open the eyes of ppl. simply brilliant
This is one of the greatest, most tragic romance stories ever. It absolutely destroyed me. Full sob.
Plssss watch “but I’m a cheerleader”!! It’s about a closeted lesbian who doesn’t realize it until she’s sent to a conversion camp. It’s really eye opening to the way parts of different religions see gay people and how they aren’t always accepted. I love u and that movie sooo much 🌈🌈💕💕
I remember being 9 and knowing I was gay, I had no clue how to tell my dad or anyone so i had to toughen up and just bury it deep down. This movie made me cry like a baby at the end 😢 love this reaction 🖤✊🏽
Fun fact: The DVD cover is meant to be a play off of the Titanic one, to show they're star crossed lovers.
Everyone talks about the beans but imagine riding a horse for hours after that. On another note, Pedro Almodóvar was set to direct this movie but had creative differences with the studio. This year he is filming a short movie with Ethan Hawke (a sheriff) and Pedro Pascal (an outlaw) as lovers that reunite after 25 years. It will make for the perfect sad double feature.
I saw this when it came out when I was almost 30. It was a very special experience, and an incredible film. But I am thankful that now have options other than the usual gay trauma now. It was depressing coming of age in the '90s and early 2000's. All of our representation was either a joke of incredibly depressing.
Yep. Same. Going from something like this to things like Heartstopper today just amazes me how far we've come. And then I look at the anti-LGBTQ attacks going on in places like Florida (where I live) and it saddens me how much farther we still have to go.
I've watched this film not too long ago, and I was like "Heath is in it, and I know there's romance, it's going to be a nice movie"...
It was indeed a nice movie, despite the fact that after I finished it I was so devastated about the ending that I've remained sad for hours that day 🙈
Is literally one of the best movies ever made! I saw a straight man leave a totally packed theater and break into tears in the men's room.
Or maybe he was a closet gay. 😢
The kitchen scene was intense. But Ennis attacked her first. When she told him he should get married again, his response was, "Well, once burned." He burned her. She didn't burn him. And even after he grabbed her & threatened to beat her, she did not tell their daughters or her husband about him and Jack. 😎 Enjoyed your reaction. My husband and I went to see Brokeback in the theater, in 2005. Left us emotionally numb for a couple of days.
God, I miss Heath Ledger. My daughters and I were just talking about him over Thanksgiving. He was so gifted. The scene at the end with Jack's shirt shattered me.
i've watched this movie twice, and i've burst out crying both times. idk how anybody could not even shed one tear at this movie 😭
Okay, first of all, great reaction video!!! And 2nd, I have to share a memory I'd forgotten that watching this made me remember:
When I was growing up, my parents were homophobic. No "burning in hell" or outward hate, but they were intolerant and regarded it as shameful and unnatural (which unfortunately helped keep me in the closet for a long time). Today, they are MUCH better, especially in speaking up for gay rights and equity. But back when Brokeback came out, my mom had advanced some, but my dad was still pretty stuck in his old mindset.
Then one day, I'm over at their house, and my dad (who is also very country and with a thick southern accent), says,
"You know, I thought I'd give that Brokeback Mountain movie a try. Especially since I really like that Jake kid."
* *me as time freezes, trying not to look too shocked 😮* *
"And you know what? That is a really, really good movie."
* *now probably failing not to look shocked but doing my best 😳* *
"But its just so sad, you know? Jack just wanted them to have a life together. And Ennis, he was just scared is all. Especially after what his father did. And then they go an kill poor Jack! Just for being gay. That's not right. And poor Ennis, he'll probably never love anybody else for the rest of his life."
* 🥺🥺😭 *
"Yeah, its still really good tho, even if its sad. I've watched it a few times now."
* 💀💀💀 *
awe that’s sweet. i’m glad your parents were able to grow! i hope you can be more comfortable around them
@@kaepiper What a nice thing to say, tysm! 🥰
It's always a work in progress lol, but its definitely much better than it used to be.
That's beautiful!
omg I just watched this movie because you referenced it when you were watching heartstopper and nick was trying to find a lgbt movie to watch with his mom. can’t wait to watch. ❤️
same 😭
i literally cried TWICE during this reaction if that doesn't tell you how much this movie gets me
I always took Jacks dad saying he would be buried in the family plot as a sign he loved his son, he may not have agreed with his lifestyle, but regardless he loved him and would always consider him family, and hence wanted him buried where he belonged (in his view).
so the reason it’s really difficult to tell whether Jack’s wife knows that Ennis and Jack were together is because Anne Hathaway has said that they shot two versions of the scene one where she knew, and one where she didn’t. she was told they did that because they hadn’t decided which one they were gonna go with for the final film. she says the final cut is actually a mixture of the two takes hence why it’s hard to read whether she’s sad about her husband, or angry/jealous about talking to the man he was cheating on her with (if i remember the interview correctly she actually said she THINKS it a mix of the two she may not have been sure)
also the scene of jack getting beaten to death is possibly meant to be in Ennis’ head, the point is that while Jack’s wife may have been told one story there is a very real possibility that he was beaten to death for being queer, but also that if his death was just an accident/‘senseless’, it makes sense Ennis would have a hard time grappling with that and might assume it was a beating because then at least you have a reason for why he died
I love these videos, he seriously needs more subscribers!!
literally as a 26 yr old bi woman idk how i only watched this for the first time the other day. that being said i i was a happier woman before.
this movie is literally everything, i always recommend to every friend who asks for movies recommendations!!! iconic, i miss heath i was a very big fan, always watched every single movie he did! this is a bittersweat movie for sure
First of all the edits are funny. This is my first video of yours to watch. Answer to question: Why does this movie have to end on such a downer? Easily answered. It doesn’t. After decades together and one gone to heaven, what more do you want? Ennis isn’t going to go to Fire Island and NYC and be a party favor or daddy. Ennis is closed, insular, brooding, with very little tolerance for emotion. When I first saw this, I saw some twink queen pretend to wipe his eyes at the end like he understood the gravity of what he just saw. It’s only when you’ve been in love and gone thru hell together with your partner that this movie opens up like a flower and let’s you peer into it’s true power. You might be a bit too young, a bit immature to understand Heath Ledger’s magnificent performance. I mean no disrespect, age changes people, you’ll see. I’m 43 and can see the gift this movie is to our gay community. The day your naïveté has gone, watch this again. You’ll understand. Kisses, doll.
“Do sheep have gooches?” I hollered so loud. 🤣😅
I saw this film in the cinema in Manchester when it first came out, and I saw people coming out of the showing before mine crying, so I went to the restroom and got plenty of tissue from the toilet rolls to wipe my eyes with in case I ended up crying too, which I did. It is a really good film, so it was worth the tears.
Y'all cried because it was a shit movie and you wasted your money
I gotta thank you for making this coz… man I’ve been so depressed for the past couple of days but at least you made me laugh with your reactions ❤😂
I just watched this movie for the first time today and it was so beautiful definitely my top 3 favourite movies ever it deserves way more credit then it does. RIP HEATH.
LOVED THIS and really love the idea of a gay film reaction series! Here are some suggestions:
- Call Me by Your Name (well, duh)
- Love, Simon (it started the current mainstream wholesome queer storytelling trend, imo)
- Moonlight (oscar winner!)
- The Normal Heart (aids crisis in 80s NYC... must watch!)
- God's Own Country (the "British version" of Brokeback Mountain...)
- The Boys in the Band (shows how gay people lived in the 60s, the whole cast is queer)
The list goes on and on... Even if you don't post a reaction, I feel every gay boy needs to se these at least once!
I love God's Own Country ❤️
I would add A Single Man to the list. Beautiful movie and story.
Supernova is good too
Great list! I NEED to see everyone do CMBYN, that film is deadly gorgeous and so heart-wrenching
The moment when you haven’t watched this movie in years and finally twig that the guy at 26:21 is Hopper! Same, Brad 😄
I HAVE NEVER KLICKED THIS FAST can't wait to watch you sob bestie
I was very young when i first watched this movie (i had borrowed a bunch of movies from our local video store, picking this specifically because i had heard about the ‘outrage’ and was curious) and i vividly remember just bawling through most of it. My mom got worried when i got downstairs looking like a total wreck lol. It’s a stunning movie. The acting is so good, it’s shot wonderfully and i can’t listen to that soundtrack without tearing up. It’s not a something i want to rewatch. It’s too painful and upsetting but i do think it’s a very important movie.
Thank you for the wonderful video Brad! ❤️
Brad: “I think I’d be the camp guy”
Yes, yes you would!
That realization about David Harbor. 😄
Much love, Brad! ❤️🧡💛💚💙💜🤎🖤
I've only seen that movie once in my life. I watched it with my mom and my sister. I was still in the closet but my mom kind of knew I was gay and it was the most awkward situation that I've ever been a part of. Good God I was mortified when THAT scene started happening. It also left me traumatised so yeah. It was a proper EXPERIENCE. hahahaha
The first time a watched it i was like 17 and i was shocked, i think at the time i was not that aware of the lgbtq+ community around me since where i live is not something you talk about openly or not without it being a joke. So i watched it at a sleepover with some friends and we all fell to silence at the end. It made me feel a lot of things, i recognized instantly that it was going to be a beautiful story, but how it ended for one of the characters made me sick to my stomach, i couldnt comprehend how or why they had to suffer so much just for love. It made me tear up, it made me aware of the people around me, it woke me up to be gentle and respectful. It hurt, but it was worth it.
Ps. I love your reactions!! I was wondering if you have ever watched a BL Thai drama? If not, allow me to recommend KinnPorsche, its a very good one, and i think its helping Thai BL grow and be recognized more. Thanks!!
Love the Heartstopper books in the back tho
You noticed too? ☺️
Yesss i noticed them all the way at the end of the video hahaha
okay if we're checking off iconic movies with queer characters, lets do Perks of Being a Wallflower next, i beg!!!! (it ends happy-sad, like it hurts ur heart but you love it)
That “ im a sad cowboy “ hate me cracking up so loud 😂
I love this film even though the ending is so sad , but it’s such a beautiful film.
YOU SHOULD WATCH SHELTER, one of my favorites lgbtq movies ever!!
"I want to marry a cowboy"
Never have I related more to this statement💕😍
They're technically shepherds not cowboys but i agree nontheless
Like many short story adaptations, this is really faithful to Annie Proulx’s story of the same name. Brilliant writing, as is the screenplay by McMurtry and Ossana.
Is it bad that I accidentally called this 'bareback mountain" in front of my mum once 😬😬😬we deserve a remake of this with a happy ending
there was a "bareback mountain" reference on one of the Drag Race franchises this year...
@@ZakhadWOW haha really. When I turned 18 I asked my mum if she could get me "bareback mountain" for my birthday lol ffs
The way I WHEEEEEZED... 🤣
You look so cute in your cowboy hat! This movie gutted me when I watched it like 15 years ago already (fml I’m old) when I was 15. Haven’t been able to watch it since but it truly is a beautiful and heartbreaking film.
The thing that gets me is that the "deceased" postcard is the only time we see Ennis reaching out to Jack instead of the other way around.
OK so when I clicked on this video I was so excited and all but now we are less than a minute into the movie and I'm getting too vulnerable already the movie is beautifully made it makes me emotional even when I'm not at the sad scenes
THE MOMENT THIS SHOWED UP ON MY FEED. I literally watched this movie a couple of months ago while watching old gay movies and after finishing it was sad that not many people watched it nowadays and hen Brad rolls in with this video... istg... godsent
If you want to see a really good series with LGBTQ content, I can warmly recommend Sense8. You need to give it more than one episode because the first episode is confusing.
I cried the first time and every time after that. Didn't even manage to stop crying now even though you really kept your spirits up.
Oh BIG YES! Would totally love watching Brad rect to Sense8!
Ooh sense8 is so I love t gar show. I hate that they couldn't afford to keep making it
Such an underrated show. Brilliant show. So sad it was canceled.
Could you tell me where I can watch this series?
I don't think she lied , is just think heath's character always had the image of "guys like them " to die like how his father showed him when he was young , so when she was saying how he died , for heath's character the only way was for someone to find out that they are gay and attack jack's character the same way that his father showed him
You said try not to cry, and I failed horribly. I started crying as Heath stepped out of the truck in the first 2 dang seconds of your video; he was and still is my favorite human being ever
This movie is literally just such a masterpiece
I watched the movie two or three times but I still don’t know how I feel about it. It is beautiful and so sad at the same time. I understand it’s in the sixties and homosexuality was still considered a mental illness but look at what happened, not only Jack and Ennis suffered but two other women got hurt because they had to get married… and the saddest part of it is that it still exists. If it wasn’t for you I wouldn’t have watched it 😢 Now I’m depressed I need to go watch your heartstopper réactions 🥰
Oh sis if this makes you depressed do not watch Braddy Daddy's HS reactions lol
@@rue...whenwasthis I thought they were really cute ^^
@@alexandreselvinelli2439 they WERE but the teeaaarrrrssssss
@@rue...whenwasthis You’re right I should wait until tomorrow 😉
The times were different back then. I'm 65 now, and I was married to a woman for 11 yrs from 1977-1988....I asked for the divorce because I was miserable and ready to come out....but when my employer of the past decade found out I was gay, they fired me....so...there are reasons for how we dealt with the homophobia of those times...not to mention that AIDS was killing off all of our gay friends right and left for the next decade after coming out......so, being married to a woman probably saved my life. I am so lucky to have a daughter and a granddaughter who love me and were raised to understand and love LGBT people. Our paths are not always easy, nor direct to our goals...but we did the best we could back then and got through it.
Brokeback Mountain is such an amazing and strong Movie! Thank you for your gorgeous reaction!
Tbh when I first watched it. It took me a few days to recover GAY TRAUMA LITERALLY!!!
Not me watching this movie in secret because I'm not out yet 👁️👄👁️
I did too! When I was 13 or 14 I watched in secret lol
The first time I watched was late at night with my bestie his parents were away from home alot so we had a few sleepovers.
Seeing it on Netflix that fateful sleepover just added to my gayness and I was happy.
I cried a whole lot at the end.
The ribbon inside the hat usually is tied at the back of the hat. This way you don't accidentally put it on backwards.
The shirt and the music at the end… as if jack’s death wasn’t sad enough they just really drive it home. 😭😭😭
Literally balled my eyes out to this movie its such a sad but beautiful story!
lol I’m lesbian and watching u thirst over the men is so amazing bc it makes me even more sure I’m gay. so thank you
Um, what?
This movie was ahead of it's time, and also exactly at the right time, all at once
I thoroughly enjoyed watching this with you. It made me less sad. I have watched this film over a dozen times and sobbed each time 😢. You are a joy to watch ❤
This movie is amazing. Such a masterpiece.
you should watch but i'm a cheerleader!! it's a 90s lesbian rom-com, i feel like you would love it:)
Ugh I'm so happy you reacted to this I think I'm about to cry
Okay but Brad’s reaction to But I’m A Cheerleader would be hysterical
It ALWAYS makes me cry when at the end, the only thing Enis has is Jack's jacket wrapped in his shirt!😭
I literally only saw the title and thought fuck yeah imma watch this🤣🤣🏳️🌈
"Why does she confront him now?" Because she's tired of him thinking she's a complete idiot and wants some agency in the situation.
LETSGOO BROKEBACK MOUNTAINN I litterally watched this movie yesterday
As much as this is a beautiful story, and a wonderfully acted movie, I hate this film for one particular reason, a lot of guys I've met think this is what true gay love looks like. It isn't. The love shown in this movie is often times violent, abusive, and harmful. An abusive relationship is often mistaken for a passionate one. It shouldn't be like this in real life. Certainly not in this day and age where you can be out and have healthy, normal relationships (edit - at least in some parts of the world).
That's only because we barely had any representation in movies back then, in mainstream movies at least. Now that's changed, fortunately, and people can find all types of lgtbq+ stories.
I hope me saying this won't make you feel uncomfortable or anything but I'm in a little bit of a stressful time in my life right now, I have to be on the run the whole day,
anyway so you liking my comments and replying to one of them bacame the highlight of my day and made me so happy and gave me energy to go on with the rest of the day. Thx ❤️
(side note : I did panic like
"OMG HE JUST REPLIED TO MY COMMENT"
kind of situation)
awww honey, i hope you sort everything out 💝💝💝
@@BradEvans21
😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭 On the verge of sobbing ngl... thank you ❤️
I cry every time I watch this movie
The last phone call between Ennis and Lureen was actually shot multiple times for Anne Hathaway to portray more approaches. Like she knew or did not know and suspected something, so we have free interpretation of what it could really be
maybe you could do s3 of Skam at some point... I think that'd be right up your alley
The whole time I was watching this, I was thinking about how much you need to react to Rina Sawayama's This Hell music video! The video production, western/cowboy/queer aesthetics, and music solidified it as THE pride anthem.
BRAD YOU HAVE TO REACT TO “POSE” !!! pls it’s such a good show and I’m dying to see your reaction to it
Brad you are absolutely iconic..you had me dead with the memes..well done for it crying i didn’t succeed..this is such a heartbreaking story but one of my faves ❤️🩹
Brad the bareback king 👑