By James Bowman on 2.23.09 @ 6:02AM
The Oscar winner's performance is terrific.
Imagine that you're a liberal-progressive with radical
tendencies. Go on, it's not that hard. You may not be a
Marxist, exactly, but you accept the neo-Marxian model of a world
divided into exploiters and exploited, oppressors and oppressed.
You are a keen multiculturalist and sexual liberationist -- by
which I mean that you not only believe that people should be free
to do anything they like sexually, so long as they are consenting
adults, but that doing what you like sexually is a defining
quality of your personhood. Anyone who dares to disapprove of or
put any restrictions on your sexual self-expression in any way is
as surely an oppressor as someone who runs a sweatshop or
enforces Jim Crow laws or runs a colonialist government.
Now imagine that, as this very progressive person, you see a
movie like -- oh, I don't know, The Searchers, John
Ford's classic Western of 1956. Just check off the boxes. Racism?
Check. Sexism? Check. Racism and sexism together? Check and
check. Genocide of Native Americans promoted? Check. Sexual
puritanism and "repression"? Check. Promotion of war and
violence, probably related to the same sexual repression? Check.
Triumphalist and traditionalist approach to American history as
"winning" or "taming" of the "wild" West and therefore
anti-environmentalist as well as genocidal? Check. There may not
be any evil capitalists or factory owners in the movie, but when
you've said that you've said just about all there is to be said
for it as a political document. And, of course, as a good
progressive, you believe implicitly that everything is a
political document.
And yet you like this movie. You may not like it a lot, but if
your aesthetic sensibility is at least as highly developed as
your political consciousness, you may well conclude that the
movie's reactionary politics don't matter all that much in
comparison with the beauty of its imagery and construction, its
character study of a man of heroic stature and its human
sympathies with those who suffered the hardships and the
heartaches of the American frontier in the period just after the
Civil War. Well, if you can imagine this hypothetical situation,
all you have to do now is reverse it. Imagine yourself a
reactionary -- that should be a bit easier -- faced with a
left-wing, liberationist movie of a certain quality and
accomplishment and you will have some idea of how I felt about
Gus Van Sant's Milk.
Not, I think, that it is on a level with The
Searchers. Very few movies are, after all. But I agree
with A.O.
Scott, the much more smitten reviewer for
the New York Times, at least so far as to say that
"Milk is accessible and instructive, an astute chronicle
of big-city politics and the portrait of a warrior whose passion"
-- I would add bravery -- "was equaled by his generosity and good
humor." In short, the historical Harvey Milk, one of the first
openly gay elected public officials in the country who was gunned
down (along with Mayor George Moscone) in 1978 by his fellow San
Francisco supervisor, Dan White, is here portrayed by Sean Penn
as a preux chevalier of the sexual revolution, and this
celebration of his life, for all its propaganda and dubious (in
my view) politics, is also a celebration of honor in perhaps the
only way it still can be celebrated. The fact that White later
got off with a manslaughter conviction by using the now-notorious
"Twinkie defense" -- that he had been deranged at the time of the
killings from having eaten too much junk food -- only serves
further to cast the soft glow of nobility around the iconic
figure of Harvey Milk.
Mr. Van Sant does a fine job of weaving together archive footage
of the period -- as well, at the very beginning of the film, of
an even earlier period where arrests on "morals" charges were a
regular feature of homosexual life -- and re-enactments of Milk's
various political campaigns and the private life that was closely
bound up with them. Mr. Penn's performance is to my eye terrific
-- though a gay friend tells me he thinks it too self-consciously
"gay" -- and neither he nor White (Josh Brolin) are allowed to
stray into caricature, as a lesser film might have allowed them
to do. I thought the gay sex, though tastefully represented,
bordered on the excessive, but I also recognize that it couldn't
have been omitted without being untrue to a man who led the way
for a whole generation of gay people in defining himself,
publicly, by what he got up to in the privacy of the bedroom.
You will perhaps not be surprised to learn that I regret this
historical development. "Privacy is the enemy now," says Harvey
Milk in the film, and you can see what he means. But I still
retain a sentimental attachment to privacy myself. Its gradual
erosion if not complete elimination from our lives at the behest
of a coalition of gays and feminists in collusion with a media
culture that stands to gain monetarily from the fall of every
remaining barrier between public and private strikes me as being
a wholly lamentable state of affairs, and the possible prelude to
some future tyranny that is now scarcely imaginable. The headline
to Mr. Scott's review is "Freedom Fighter in Life Becomes Potent
Symbol in Death." But the possibility that the title of "Freedom
Fighter" might have some of the same irony about it that it does
in the case of Marxist guerrillas, fighting to institute a
Stalinist or Maoist tyranny, is not a negligible one.