Brokeback Mountain has
garnered a number of
parodies of its central plot, two men in a
forbidden
homosexual relationship. With the release of
Brokeback to the Future (a parody trailer that combined
clips from the
Back to the Future trilogy, along
with themes and music from
Brokeback Mountain, to create a humorous
interpretation of the Back to the Future films), this led to a
mass media and
Internet phenomenon with scores of
videos using footage from films and television shows that has been
edited to suggest a
Brokeback Mountain-like romantic
relationship between other characters. These videos belong to a
category known as
re-cut trailers.
Parody techniques
Critic Virginia Heffernan at the
New York Times
dissected the making of these parodies to find how it's possible to
find or suggest a
homoerotic theme in that many and so disparate
films
[617]. These trailers share common
visual and sound treatment with the original Brokeback Mountain
trailer, like using slight
slow motion and including the main theme from
the original soundtrack by
Gustavo Santaolalla:
:
It works
almost every time: a gay movie seems to emerge when scenes between
male leads, or a male lead and a supporting actor, are slowed down,
set to make-out music and bumpered by portentous cards that say
things like, "A truth they couldn't deny." The editing,
and the use of slow motion, do suggest that close-ups, especially
viewed at length, are intrinsically erotic. Notable
parodies
In South Park episode 209, "Chef's Chocolate Salty Balls"
(written and aired in 1998, after Proulx's story had already been
published and the McMurtry/Ossana screenplay adaptation was
circulating in Hollywood), Cartman made a statement about independent
movies: "They're always about gay cowboys eating pudding." In a
2005 interview with the Associated Press, the authors of the
episode were asked about Cartman's statement in relation to
then-forthcoming Brokeback Mountain. Trey Parker replied,
presumably in jest, "If there's pudding eating in there, we’re
going to sue." [618] It should be noted that this was
more of a reference than a parody.On Google Video, there is a
parody called "Brokeback Dumber," in which Harry and Lloyd from
Dumb and
Dumber are portrayed as a couple of gay
caballerosSaturday Night Live did a trailer
parody called "Brokeback Goldmine" with two gay prospectors (played
by castmember Will
Forte and then-host Alec Baldwin) in a goldmine.
Mad TV also
did a trailer parody of "Brokeback Mountain" called "Brokeback
Mountain 2: The Cowgirls" about two lesbian cowgirls (played by castmembers Crista Flanigan and
Nicole
Parker) keeping their relationship a secret from their
husbands.In the first episode of Season 2 of Mind of Mencia,
Carlos
Mencia and Mario
Lopez star in a trailer for a fictional movie called "Wetback
Mountain", a parody of Brokeback Mountain. The movie
concerns two Hispanic
males who work in a corporate office. Because of the bond formed by
these two Hispanic employees, many other employees assume the two
males are a gay couple. In an attempt to shock the other employees,
Mencia and Lopez pretend to be gay. Eventually, the two retreat to
a place called "Wetback Mountain" where they exchange their
business attire for traditional Mexican attire, and the pair begin to dance to
Mariachi music.
American Idol took a twist with the title
"Broke-Note Mountain" in which a pop trio wearing cowboy hats
failed to perform well in front of Simon Cowell.In the sitcom
Joey, Joey was 'proofreading'
Brokeback Mountain and provided the following quote: "And he kisses
'her' chest."Premium-cable channel Starz included a parody of Brokeback Mountain in their
"Movies In 30 Seconds (And Performed By Bunnies)" series of
rabbit-themed movie parodies, featured on their website and
Video On
Demand service. [619] An
Emerson
College-based comedy group called Chocolate Cake City [620] created a trailer for the
Back to the Future films titled
Brokeback to the Future. Their trailer used clever editing
to suggest that Back to the Future characters
Marty McFly and
Doctor Emmett Brown were involved in a
romantic
homosexual
relationship, as in Brokeback Mountain. This video
became popular on the Internet in early 2006. [621] The show The Soup had a skit called
'Brokeback Kong,' involving a man dressed up as a gorilla hugging another man dressed
up as a gorilla while wearing cowboy costumes. It was a parody of the film
King Kong as well as
Brokeback Mountain. David Spade's Showbiz Show had a
skit in which two female cowgirls kissed; the joke is that the
sequel to Brokeback
Mountain will involve two homosexual women instead of
homosexual men. On a 2005 Late Show with David
Letterman, guest Nathan Lane (who himself is gay) starred in a
skit in which the film had been turned into a flamboyantly gay
musical, which was used for promoting The Producers film adaptation. In the
first three weeks of February 2006 alone, Letterman used the film
as part of a joke in three Top Ten lists. The Tonight
Show with Jay
Leno parodied the marketing of the movie with a re-edited
trailer that makes it appear that the film is full of sexy women
and as a very quick afterthought mentions, "...and two gay
cowboys". The animated series Drawn Together
parodied the movie extensively in the episode "Xandir and Tim, Sitting in a
Tree" with the relationship between Xandir and Captain Hero's gay alter ego Tim Tommerson, even referencing the
film's famous line, "I wish I knew how to quit you." The porn
industry loosely parodied the film in 3 gay porn films named
Bareback Mountain, a heterosexual
anal porn film called Broke
Crack Mountain, and a bisexual porn film named
Bi-Back
Mountain. On March 29, 2006, the Footy Show on the Nine
Network in Melbourne, Australia, parodied the film in a skit
entitled "Brokeleg Mountain." Two high profile football players
presenting on the program, Shane Crawford and Nathan Brown played the
parts of Ennis
Del Mar and Jack
Twist, the joke drawing heavily on Brown's dramatic breaking of
his leg in an AFL game in the previous
season. A parody of the trailer appeared on Australian television show
The Chaser's War on
Everything on ABC
TV. It showed the trailer of a so-called Christian edition of
the movie where the two lead characters (Andrew Hansen and
Chris Taylor) are shown secretly
reading the Bible together, singing together and protesting against
abortion. The trailer's tag line states that "The only man that it
is OK for another man to love, is Jesus." The Mexican program
La
Parodia featured "Secreto en el Rancho Grande" on March
25, 2006, a satire that explores Mexican culture, machismo, gay
issues, and contemporary Mexican politics. It uses Brokeback
Mountain as its pretext, parodying its music and natural
backdrop in detail. It follows Brokeback's storyline with
usual gay stereotypes until the main characters are given a
fictitious happy ending. Ennis says, "Let's not worry about what
anyone says anymore. Let's go get married and be happy," depicting
an Ennis quite unlike the timid one depicted in the movie and short
story. Both characters walk off into the sunset holding hands
mocking traditional western endings. Scary Movie 4 also
parodies Brokeback Mountain featuring Anthony Anderson
and Kevin Hart as
Jack Twist and Ennis Del Mar. The British satirical sketch
show Dead Ringers featured a sketch
spoofing Brokeback Mountain, that featured impersonations
of Bill Oddie and
another naturalist. The sketch ends with the two men lying together
in a tent, and Oddie saying, "Now that's what I call the funky
gibbon" (spoofing Bill Oddie's chart topper with his comedy group
The
Goodies).Contained on the DVD set Beavis and
Butt-Head: The Mike Judge Collection, Volume 2 (on disc 3,
under "Previews"), is a parody featuring Beavis and
Butt-Head, which uses a similar score and format as
Brokeback's movie trailer. The parody functions as a
commercial for the upcoming DVD release of The Mike Judge
Collection, Volume 3.The Internet Video Sketch Show
Moron Life did one
of the few non-Gay themed Brokeback parodies for the start of
their third season.In 2006, the 78th Annual Academy Awards
parodied the movie. In the telecast's opening film to introduce
host Jon Stewart, the clip opens with a shot of a tent on top of a
mountain and a narrator introducing "your host - Billy Crystal!"
Crystal pops his head out of the tent and declines hosting the
show, saying "I'm busy". Chris Rock (the 2005 host) then pops his
head out of the tent and says "I'm busy too."Also in the
Academy Awards, a mattress commercial began by saying "Got a broke
back?" right after the awards went on commercial.In the 2006
Hong Kong Cantonese-language film Rob-B-Hood, starring Jackie Chan, a minor police character is
shown to have slight homosexual tendencies towards the other main
character, played by Louis Koo, as well as his (the minor character's)
police partner. Irritated, the partner asks him what part of town
he is from. In English, the policeman replies "I am from Brookbrack
Mountain".Les Justiciers Masqués produced a parody which
featured André Boisclair "finding" both
George W.
Bush and
Stephen
Harper - played by half-nude actors - together in a tent.
Boisclair addresses the two parodied leaders saying that
"Quebec will never join them in that 'kind of
play'".In "Night at the Museum" (2006), the miniature
cowboy Jed (Owen Wilson) and the miniature Roman general Octavius
(Steve Coogan) are on a mission with a few other miniatures to stop
the bad guys from escaping. In order to do so, they are going to
take the air out of the tires of the bad guys' van, using the
miniature Roman general's spear. The five of them cram the spear
into the valve on the tire, which immediately starts letting out
air. Three of the miniatures go flying, and Jed and Octavian are
left hanging on to the spear. Octavius turns to Jed and croaks out
'Save... yourself...' to which Jed replies 'Ah'm not quittin'
you!'