Milk

19 Jan 2009
Critics rating: 4 stars out of 5
Reviewed by Tom Charity, LOVEFiLM

Sean Penn as you've never seen him before! Certainly one of the actors of his generation, Penn gets in touch with his feminine side in Gus Van Sant's powerful biopic.

Milk was the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California, but was murdered soon afterwards. (No spoiler here – the movie gives us the outcome in the opening minutes.)

An audiotape Milk records “just in case” is screenwriter Dustin Lance Black’s convenient structuring device, allowing Harvey to narrate his own life story.

Cast details

In this telling it’s a life that begins at 40 – when he picks up Scott (James Franco), falls in love, comes out and drops out. The year is 1970 and San Francisco beckons. Their Castro Street camera store soon becomes a focal point for the booming gay community, and it’s not long before Harvey makes the first of several unsuccessful runs for district supervisor.

Civic elections might seem like small beer, especially up against the competition from Frost/Nixon, W. and indeed Barack Obama, but the persecution that compelled Milk to stand is no trivial matter. The gay rights movement’s most critical accomplishment, the film suggests, is how it liberated gays to be themselves.

Milk: Sean Penn, Josh Brolin, Emile Hirsch, James Franco

As Harvey tries to explain to his heterosexual colleague Dan White (Josh Brolin), this isn’t about principles, it’s about people’s lives – three of his lovers had threatened suicide. One of them, Jack Lira (Diego Luna), goes through with it. The political can’t get more personal than that. Ironically the devoutly “normal” White is the one who is truly messed up. (Brolin is terrific in this part, incidentally, much more sympathetic than White probably deserves.)

Here’s another irony: to earn the recognition and validation of the voters, Milk has to shed his reborn hippie uniform and ponytail, put on a suit and get a hair cut. Making the same calculation, director Gus Van Sant has axed the long takes and experimentalism that made Elephant and Paranoid Park arresting but decidedly marginal experiences and turned in his most conventional movie since Finding Forrester. In other words, he’s playing it straight this time.

The strategy is sound; the execution, assured. Van Sant captures the time and the place with unobtrusive precision, seamlessly mixing in reams of archival news reports but never tipping the 70s detail into kitsch. Sean Penn is studied and thoughtful, impassioned and immediately sympathetic as Harvey. We can see how he attracts so much support – and how his drive and commitment doesn’t leave enough time for a “real” life. When Penn smiles, there’s always pain there – it’s almost a wince – but we’re the ones who feel the sorrow: this Milk seems like a genuinely good guy, and we’d rather not lose him.

Like Philadelphia and Brokeback Mountain, Milk advances its agenda with some caution - but no matter that all three films end in death and tears, that agenda is progressing, step by step.

Like Philadelphia and Brokeback Mountain, Milk advances its agenda with some caution – but no matter that all three films end in death and tears, that agenda is progressing, step by step. As I recall, Tom Hanks and Antonio Banderas barely touched lips in Jonathan Demme’s Oscar-winning film. Ang Lee’s love story is more explicit than Milk, but it’s also haunted by repression in a way that Van Sant’s frank and intimate, forthright and engaged movie is not.

This is not just a single-issue movie either. In its conviction that change isn’t affected through rhetoric alone, but through the hard dedication of campaign work, persuasion, inspiration, inclusion, and good old, bad old politicking, Milk feels more than timely. It stakes a claim to be the first movie to reflect the Obama ascendancy, in all its audacity and hope.

Reviews

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  • Most helpful members' reviews (3) of Milk

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  • 46 out of 47 people found this review helpful

    * * * This review contains spoilers * * *ShowHide

    Rated - 5 stars [Highly rated reviewer]

    Great honesty makes change happen?

    • ThePagan
      • ThePagan from WORTHING
  • 25 out of 29 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    WOW - This is a DREAFULLY BAD film. REALLY LOUSY !

    I was expecting this to be quite good, Sean Penn, 21 gramms etc. But is actually terrible. Sean Penn himself is laughable as Milk and the support cast are just unknown actors. We wondered if any of them were actually gay in real life since they overacted it so badly. Its like watching Danny Larou impersonating MArgaret Thatcher. We gave it an hour then had to turn it off because it was just SO irritating.

    One to miss for certain.

      • A customer from uk
  • 16 out of 17 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars [Highly rated reviewer]

    Excellent

    Gus Van Sant's biopic of gay politician/activist Harvey Milk is a fascinating, engrossing film that celebrates the power of the individual in the fight for human rights. This is one of those films that whilst not 'feel-good' is ultimately uplifting as it follows Milk from his 40th birthday in 1970 New York to his untimely death in 1978.

    Sean Penn is truly outstanding in the title role, to such a point that it is easy to overlook the excellent performances by the rest of the cast, especially James Franco and Josh Brolin, who both turn in fantastic performances.

    Van Sant's direction may be his most conventional in a few years but that also allows him to show off his skill with storytelling and character development. He also avoids the usual hollywood trap of making this a film about Saint Milk by showing his weaknesses and flaws as well as his charisma and power. Van Sant's direction remains restrained throughout, taking time to develop the historical background and context as well as the main characters. Ultimately, a first rate movie

  • Most recent members' reviews (2) of Milk

    View all
  • 4 out of 5 people found this review helpful

    * * * This review contains spoilers * * *ShowHide

    Rated - 4 stars

    Informative gay rights film

      • A customer from London
  • 1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

    Rated - 0 stars

    Inspiring

    Absolutely fantastic. A real eye opener as to the hardships of gay men and lesbians fighting for rights over the last few decades. A must for any gay man or woman.

      • Jbic88 from Worcester
  • 46 out of 47 people found this review helpful

    * * * This review contains spoilers * * *ShowHide

    Rated - 5 stars [Highly rated reviewer]

    Great honesty makes change happen?

    • ThePagan
      • ThePagan from WORTHING
  • 25 out of 29 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    WOW - This is a DREAFULLY BAD film. REALLY LOUSY !

    I was expecting this to be quite good, Sean Penn, 21 gramms etc. But is actually terrible. Sean Penn himself is laughable as Milk and the support cast are just unknown actors. We wondered if any of them were actually gay in real life since they overacted it so badly. Its like watching Danny Larou impersonating MArgaret Thatcher. We gave it an hour then had to turn it off because it was just SO irritating.

    One to miss for certain.

      • A customer from uk
  • 16 out of 17 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars [Highly rated reviewer]

    Excellent

    Gus Van Sant's biopic of gay politician/activist Harvey Milk is a fascinating, engrossing film that celebrates the power of the individual in the fight for human rights. This is one of those films that whilst not 'feel-good' is ultimately uplifting as it follows Milk from his 40th birthday in 1970 New York to his untimely death in 1978.

    Sean Penn is truly outstanding in the title role, to such a point that it is easy to overlook the excellent performances by the rest of the cast, especially James Franco and Josh Brolin, who both turn in fantastic performances.

    Van Sant's direction may be his most conventional in a few years but that also allows him to show off his skill with storytelling and character development. He also avoids the usual hollywood trap of making this a film about Saint Milk by showing his weaknesses and flaws as well as his charisma and power. Van Sant's direction remains restrained throughout, taking time to develop the historical background and context as well as the main characters. Ultimately, a first rate movie

  • 10 out of 11 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 0 stars

    Milk. Short but Fair.

    Sean Penn’s acting was very good. The film could have had 30 minutes cut off of it and no-one would have missed those minutes. The story is basically ‘we are gay except us for what we are’ all the way through. Some films like Broke Back Mountain make you think about it afterwards. Other films like The Naked Civil Servant make you think about how hard it can be to be different. This film made me think of why I did not turn it off sooner. It takes the viewer nowhere new. The story has nowhere to go after the first 30 or 40 minutes. I got to the end always thinking it might have something big to say or leave me with at the end. It had nothing at the end other than the credits.

      • A customer from Basingstoke
  • 7 out of 8 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars

    Amazing

    Just saw this movie at one of the free previews. I went in not really knowing a lot about the film or content. I walked out close to tears and wanting to find out more about this amazing man - Harvey Milk. The film really was amazing - the acting was great, the way it flowed, the content - just everything was right about this film.

    If Sean Penn doesnt win an Oscar, i will be very suprised.

      • A customer from Weston Super Mare
  • 7 out of 9 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 0 stars

    Good but not for everyone

    It just shows again the way the USA has taken a long time to catch up.

    Now they are going crazy & being Gay is the best thing ever.

    Worth watching if the history of gay rights in the USA are interesting to you.

      • A customer from Didcot
  • 7 out of 9 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    Dont bother with this

    I had to turn it off half way through. That, in my book is a sin..to turn off films..but this was excruciating to watch. Please, you wont get back the time so save it for a wellworth film. This is not it

      • A customer from Derry. Northern Ireland
  • 6 out of 6 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars

    Essential vewing for everyone...

    And a good old fashioned tearjerker too. As a 60 year old gay man, what can I say; film is art, film is entertainment, and here, film is history. Wonderful to relive those heady days, but why wasn't this film made 20 years ago. It's not necessarily a gay film, as audiences are showing; it's about personal courage, and standing up and being counted. A film for everyone, but did we really use expletives quite so much back then! I would have like to see greater reflection of gay women but perhaps the film does reflect the way things were. Don't miss it.

      • John from Eltham
  • 5 out of 7 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 2 stars

    Milk

    Good film but rather long.

      • CarolynD from London
  • 4 out of 5 people found this review helpful

    * * * This review contains spoilers * * *ShowHide

    Rated - 4 stars

    Informative gay rights film

      • A customer from London