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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writer (WGA):
Dustin Lance Black (written by)
Release Date:
30 January 2009 (USA) more
Tagline:
His life changed history. His courage changed lives. more
Plot:
The story of Harvey Milk, and his struggles as an American gay activist who fought for gay rights and became California's first openly gay elected official. full summary | full synopsis
Awards:
Won 2 Oscars. Another 32 wins & 45 nominations more
NewsDesk:
(1286 articles)
Ask the Flying Monkey! (November 16, 2009)
(From AfterElton.com. 15 November 2009, 6:28 PM, PST)
Principal Photography Starts on Untitled Gus Van Sant Film
(From MovieWeb. 13 November 2009, 7:12 AM, PST)
User Comments:
"I am not a candidate, I am part of a movement. The movement is the candidate." more (234 total)
Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)Additional Details
Also Known As:
Untitled Harvey Milk Project (USA) (working title)
more
MPAA:
Rated R for language, some sexual content and brief violence.
Parents Guide:
Runtime:
128 min
Country:
Language:
Colour:
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:
USA:R (certificate #44714) | UK:15 | Ireland:15A | Australia:M | Singapore:R21 | Finland:K-13 | Italy:T | Portugal:M/12 (Qualidade) | Brazil:16 | Portugal:M/12 | Portugal:M/12 (re-rating on appeal) | Philippines:R-13 (MTRCB) | Netherlands:12 | Norway:11 | Switzerland:14 (canton of Vaud) | Switzerland:14 (canton of Geneva) | Argentina:16 | Sweden:11 | Japan:PG-12 | Canada:14A (Ontario) | Hong Kong:IIB | Mexico:B15 | Austria:10 | Denmark:11 | Germany:12 | France:U | Iceland:12 | Peru:14
Filming Locations:
29th & Dolores Streets, Noe Valley, San Francisco, California, USA more
Company:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Cameo: [Dustin Lance Black]The screenwriter appears as one half of the couple that walks by the Castro camera shop after it's closed, when Harvey Milk is inside and one of the men asks if Harvey was going to win this time. more
Goofs:
Factual errors: When Harvey and Dan are being interviewed on TV in January 1978, Dan says he's expecting his first child; however, at the baby's christening, which appears to takes place no more than a few weeks after the interview, baby Charles is able to hold his head up. Babies typically become able to hold their heads up when they're around four months old. Also, in real life, Charles White was born in mid-June 1978 - after the contentious vote on the youth campus and after Harvey's forty-eighth birthday in May. (Despite the fact that Dan's grudge against Harvey developed before Charles's birth, Harvey was still invited to the christening.) more
Quotes:
Harvey Milk: [First lines] This is Harvey Milk speaking on Friday November 18th. This is to be played only in the event of my death by assassination. During one of the early campaigns, I started opening my speeches with the same line and it sort of became my signature... Hello, I'm Harvey Milk, and I'm here to recruit you. more
Movie Connections:
Referenced in "De wereld draait door: (#4.107)" (2009) more
Soundtrack:
Takin' My Time more
FAQ
How much sex, violence, and profanity are in this movie?Is this the film version of Randy Shilts' 1984 book, "The Mayor of Castro Street?"
What's the Bowie-esque song in the new trailer?
more
more (234 total)
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"Milk" sees Gus Van Sant return to the mainstream after nearly a decade of divisive 'arthouse' films, a spell he might have felt was necessary after directing "Psycho" and "Finding Forrester" back to back. The stunning, beautiful "Gerry" is still his greatest film in my estimation, but Van Sant's return to near-unanimous mainstream acclaim and some level of box-office success in "Milk" actually isn't too far off as far as Van Sant's filmography goes. Some may express disappointment that "Milk" is a 'conventional' biopic, but it really isn't conventional at all.
True, this could have been the sort of melancholy meditation Van Sant has been going for in recent years, but the best argument against that is that Harvey Milk is not that figure. He's not going to sit quietly and contemplate life. Perhaps he might have before we meet him on the eve of his fortieth birthday, but from that point onwards Harvey Milk was a man of action, of words, a man with the powerful ability to rally people for a cause, and not only gay people. He had a rare sort of energy, and an energetic film was needed to tell his story. Most impressive perhaps about Van Sant's direction and Dustin Lance Black's screenplay is that there are just as many of those melancholic, meditative moments as needed, just enough to make this a compelling character study and not a truly conventional biopic with a hero rather than a main character. The photography here is also simply gorgeous, and the camera work is outstanding, particularly the hand-held work during the rally scenes. It really succeeds in transporting you to 1970's San Francisco.
Sean Penn has frequently annoyed me. I respect his abilities, but reserve the right to express my subjective annoyance at what I perceive as sometimes hilarious over-acting. When I found out that he was going to play Harvey Milk I was nervous, since I have admired Harvey Milk ever since I was first exposed to him through the Rob Epstein documentary "The Times of Harvey Milk", which is still the best movie made about Harvey Milk, with "Milk" running a close second, and I doubt Bryan Singer's "Mayor of Castro Street" will be a serious contender. I had no reason to be nervous. Penn's performance is one of the most vibrant, fascinating, brilliant performances in years, and one of the most convincing and human. It's not a Harvey Milk impression, it's more than just that, but he truly does capture the 'essence' of Milk, if you will.
It is pointless to make a political statement in the body of this review, so take this as one only if you have to: it is disgusting that in 2008 gay rights still a matter of political debate. This film is a powerful, beautiful tribute to the rights movement. It's not a Democrats vs. Republicans film. In fact, it makes it clear that Harvey Milk was once a Republican, and sneaks in footage of Reagan in strong opposition of Proposition 6. Those short scenes should provoke some thought and discussion. They certainly did for me and the people I saw the film with. Ultimately however the film is not about an 'issue'. Harvey Milk says to Dan White that it's not about jobs or rights, that it's their lives that they were and still are fighting for. Ultimately this film is about people, not about issues, not about policy. It's about people who were told they were sick, who were told they were wrong, who were told they would corrupt society, who were accused of being pedophiles and attempting to 'recruit' children to homosexuality. The film is about Harvey Milk, a mere human being who did more for freedom and tolerance than he probably ever understood.
"I am not a candidate, I am part of a movement. The movement is the candidate."
Unfortunately, the fight against the rampant discrimination against and hatred of homosexuals is still not over. Milk's movement lives on, and grows stronger every day. He would be proud of that, and devastated that our society has not truly progressed, but only learned to mask its intolerance and hatred.