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The credits for Boys Dont Cry list "Killer Films" as one of the production companies, and thats as apt a description of this powerful film as any. Based on the short unhappy life of the now notorious "sexual misfit" Brandon Teena aka Teena Renae Brandon of Lincoln, Nebraska this murder melodrama in the Badlands mode establishes first-time director Kimberly Peirce as a major talent. Peirce spent five years on research and interviews, and that immersion pays off handsomely in finely nuanced performances and an unerringly real sense of the horrors that lie hidden in the heartland. For those who dont know, Teena Renae Brandon (1973-1992) was born a girl but saw herself increasingly as a boy not as a dyke who loved women but as a heterosexual male. And her body was apparently sufficiently cooperative to allow her to convince most of those she met, including a string of lovesick girlfriends, that she was who she said she was: Brandon Teena. Inevitably consigned by her renegade status to a marginal crowd of ex-cons, pool hall habitues, factory girls, and burned-out white trash in the dreary burg of Twin Falls, Nebraska, Brandon was eventually exposed as Teena, an act that triggered her brutal rape and murder by two cons who were part of the crowd she ran with. (One of the killers is on death row; the other is serving consecutive life sentences.) Boys Dont Cry is a fascinating expansion of what has all the earmarks of a kinky tabloid tale. It adds a kind of downbeat-poetic spin to what we saw in the excellent documentary The Brandon Teena Story. The latter film was all about reconstructing a life that not only went mostly unrecorded and unobserved, but was problematic from the gate, since Brandon was branded (by herself and others) with a dizzying array of names and identities faggot, dyke, boy, girl, hermaphrodite. Since its subject was dead and left little record of herself, the documentary used mostly other peoples memories and such prosaic sources as court records and medical transcripts to make sense of a mysterious and tragic life. Boys Dont Crys fictionalized re-creation of Brandon in close-up makes the documentarys word flesh. Hilary Swank (late of Beverly Hills 90210) brilliantly embodies this character as an unsettling pastiche of the all-American boy. Her Brandon is gentle and engaging in an almost "girlish" way, comfortable with and charismatic to women, but drawn to the look sports shirts and wrangler jeans and rituals of men. She drinks, carouses, picks fights and picks up girls, and even wears the badges of male violence a black eye she gets early in the film with pride. She wants masculine privilege, and in a simple, self-deluded way imagines the world will accede to her wish and never question the slight strangeness she exudes, the not-quite-right look of someone with a secret.
This loose-knit "family" Brandon, John, and Tom is completed by Candace (Alicia Goranson), who lets Brandon stay with her and pays dearly for it, and Lana (Chloe Sevigny), who starts as Johns girlfriend and ends as Brandons. Theyre all social castoffs living rootless lives waiting for Friday night karaoke, "bumper-skiing," and driving endlessly through the dusty fields surrounding Twin Falls. Theyre ridiculed as "wall people" near-vagrants who hang out against the wall of an all-night market waiting for something to happen. Brandons appearance energizes them and gives them a sense of purpose and possibility beyond the wall. But John and Tom are unpredictable one minute embracing Brandon, the next playing mind games and threatening violence. Brandon and Lana have the only sweet moments in the film, and theyre fleeting encounters. Their love scenes suggest the realization of the possibilities of a personality in transition, the pleasures of living by internal, not social, definitions. Lanas acceptance of Brandon as Teena resonates through the film, even as if fails to save Brandon.
Acting credits are first-rate throughout, with Peter Sarsgaard and Brendan Sexton almost too credible as the killers, alternately scary and seductive. Alicia Goranson, best remembered as Becky in the Roseanne TV show, nicely sketches in the doomed Candace, and Chloe Sevigny, who was the only good thing in Larry Clarks creepy Kids, entrances as Lana. But Swank holds the film together with her riveting combination of humor, pathos, and pain. January 2000 | Issue 27 ACCESS: At this writing, Boys Dont Cry is still in theatrical distribution, but expect it on VHS and DVD by spring of 2000. ALSO: More film reviews |
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