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Boys Don't Cry
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Boys Don't Cry (1999)

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User Rating: 7.6/10 (26,671 votes)
Photos (see all 18 | slideshow) Videos
IMDb Coverage of Comic-Con 2008

Overview

Director:
Kimberly Peirce
Writers:
Kimberly Peirce (writer) &
Andy Bienen (writer)
Release Date:
29 October 1999 (Canada) more view trailer
Genre:
Crime | Drama | Romance more
Tagline:
A true story about finding the courage to be yourself.
Plot:
The story of the life of Brandon Teena, a transgendered teen who preferred life in a male identity until it was discovered he was born biologically female. full summary | full synopsis (warning! may contain spoilers)
Awards:
Won Oscar. Another 40 wins & 27 nominations more
NewsDesk:
(30 articles)
DVD Review: Stop-Loss (From Rope Of Silicon. 11 July 2008, 12:37 AM, PDT)
Movie Reviews: Stop-loss (From Studio Briefing. 28 March 2008, 10:34 AM, PDT)
User Comments:
Disturbing and powerful film more
US TV Schedule:
Tue. July 292:30 AMHBO   

Cast

 (Cast overview, first billed only)

Hilary Swank ... Brandon Teena

Chloë Sevigny ... Lana Tisdel

Peter Sarsgaard ... John Lotter
Brendan Sexton III ... Tom Nissen
Alicia Goranson ... Candace
Alison Folland ... Kate
Jeanetta Arnette ... Lana's Mom (as Jeannetta Arnette)

Rob Campbell ... Brian

Matt McGrath ... Lonny
Cheyenne Rushing ... Nicole
Robert Prentiss ... Trucker
Josh Ridgway ... Kwik Stop Cashier
Craig Erickson ... Trucker in Kwik Stop
Stephanie Sechrist ... April

Jerry Haynes ... Judge
more
Create a character page for: ?

Additional Details

Also Known As:
Take It Like a Man (USA) (working title)
more
MPAA:
Rated R for violence including an intense brutal rape scene, sexuality, language and drug use.
Runtime:
118 min
Country:
USA
Language:
English
Color:
Color
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Dolby Digital
Certification:
Canada:18+ (Quebec) | USA:TV-MA (TV rating) | Canada:18 (Nova Scotia) | Canada:R (Alberta/Manitoba/Ontario) | Philippines:R-18 | Canada:18A (British Columbia) | USA:R (edited for re-rating) | Argentina:18 | Australia:R | Finland:K-16 | France:-16 | Germany:16 (bw) | Hong Kong:IIB | Italy:VM18 | Japan:PG-12 | Netherlands:16 | New Zealand:R18 | Norway:15 | Portugal:M/18 | Singapore:R(A) | South Korea:18 | Spain:18 | Sweden:15 | Switzerland:16 (canton of Geneva) | Switzerland:16 (canton of Vaud) | UK:18 | USA:NC-17 (original rating) | Brazil:18 | Iceland:16
Filming Locations:
Austin, Texas, USA more
MOVIEmeter: ?
V 38% since last week why?

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
To prepare for her role, Hilary Swank lived life as a man for at least a month, including wrapping her chest in tension bandages and putting socks down the front of her pants much the same way that Brandon Teena did. more
Goofs:
Errors in geography: When the girls (and Brandon) go on a trip to Kansas City, the Dallas skyline can be seen. more
Quotes:
Lana: I hate my life.
Brandon: I hate your life, too.
more
Movie Connections:
Featured in This Film Is Not Yet Rated (2006) more
Soundtrack:
Cod'ine more

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
106 out of 122 people found the following comment useful:-
Disturbing and powerful film, 6 May 2000
9/10
Author: FlickJunkie-2 from Atlanta, GA

This is a poignant and powerful film. It is the true story of Teena Brandon, a young woman who is in the throes of a sexual identity crisis. She cuts her hair and dresses like a man to see if she can pass for one. What starts out as an experiment turns into a full fledged alter ego as she is accepted as a man by a group she meets in a bar. The story follows the group's escapades, including Brandon's love affair with Lana, who falls in love with Brandon, thinking she's a man. It culminates with the discovery that Brandon is actually a woman with a dramatic confrontation in the finale.

This is film noir at it's finest. A lot of people think that this is a story about courage and lesbianism but it is really about neither. It is about the search for identity; not just sexual identity but the search for a deeper self . All the characters in this film were lost and confused, but Brandon was the only one who realized it of herself. The rest were basically playing out their despondent lives trying not to think of who or what they were. Here was a person they loved and accepted, but who turned out to be the most heinous of deviants as defined by their own prejudices and fears. This is why they were so fundamentally shaken upon the revelation of Brandon's true identity. It left them to confront their own flimsy identities. They were left with no respite from the emotional vortex. Brandon presented a terrifying threat to the way they viewed themselves. They were compelled to change who they were or hate someone they had grown to love.

This film was also about obsession. Brandon takes extraordinary risks to live the male role, not out of courage, but out of an obsession to know and understand it, and to see if she can find comfort and a sense of belonging. Likewise, writer/director Kimberly Peirce had been obsessed with this story and researched it for five years before finally making the film. Obsession generally leads to one of two places: greatness or death. For Peirce, at least for the moment, it has lead to greatness in the production of this film.

Strictly from a technical directorial standpoint there was nothing special here. The lighting was amateurish, the shots were mostly mundane. The sets and locations were realistically trashy, but it is a lot easier to create realistic trash than realistic elegance. Peirce also bogs the film down occasionally with excessive character development. However, Peirce captures in the story and the filming, the essence of rural lower class crudenes, bigotry and hatred and fear. It is the raw emotion that reaches out and grabs us. Her lens brought into sharp focus the base reality of inescapable despair and deluded hope. Reality often has fangs, and Peirce was undaunted in showing them and then ripping us to shreds.

As to Hilary Swank, I can only add one more rose to the bouquet of praise that has been heaped on her. If there was any courage in this story, it was the courage of Swank to take such a complex and disturbing role. The subtlety of her performance was astounding. She needed not just to be a woman playing a man. She needed to be a woman playing a woman playing a man, trying to look convincing yet insecure and unsure of how she was being perceived by the other characters. When in character, her many skillful lapses into moments of femininity, only to snap back into masculinity were masterfully done. For Swank, this was a meteoric rise from obscurity. It remains to be seen if it was just the perfect alignment of actor and role, or something more. I hope for the latter and look forward to seeing her next project.

Greatly obscured by Swankmania, was the performance by Chloe Sevigny as Lana, Brandon's love interest. She gave an outstanding performance in another extraordinarily difficult role. Her conflict over the implications of her sexual and emotional feelings for Brandon were sensitively and delicately portrayed. She played the part with a tentative eagerness, just as one would expect of someone whose sexual identity had been thrown into upheaval. It was also no easy career choice to be cast in a role with so many explicit sexual scenes with another woman.

This film was stark reality with no holds barred. The filmmaking was technically unsophisticated (and I'm usually a real stickler about that), but I rated it a 9/10 on pure emotional power. This film is not for you if you are offended by lesbianism, graphic violence or profanity. But if you are not intimidated by the naked reality of the darker side of life, this is a film you must experience.

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John + Tom raping a 'guy'? persnip
What about the hair polarsnake
Saddest part of whole movie? cheerycherry344
question. soilers* quadrapalegic_zombie
Where are they now? stang0233
Boys Don't Cry: The Lesson kingsleyshacklebolt
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