Reviews by Chew - 'Dallas Buyers Club'
By Gary Chew | November 23, 2013 | It's not quite like Sam Peckinpah's “Ride The High Country” or Ang Lee's “Brokeback M...
https://www.elkgrovenews.net/2013/11/reviews-by-chew-dallas-buyers-club.html
By Gary Chew | November 23, 2013 |
It's not
quite like Sam Peckinpah's “Ride The High Country” or Ang
Lee's “Brokeback
Mountain.” but Jean-Marc Vallée's “Dallas Buyers Club” also
dares to mess with
“the cowboy” mentality over against –what a cowboy, himself,
might refer to as –
being a “girlie-boy.” And the irony of bringing these two
cultures of male
existence together in a movie gives a solid platform on
which to suggest how a
life might be better lived whether heterosexual,
homosexual – male or
female.
Matthew
McConaughey is brilliant in the role of Ron Woodroof, a real
person who died in
1992. Woodroof was a ordinary electrician living in Dallas.
Ron was also a rodeo
bull rider. If you ever wanted meet an authentic,
butt-kicking, booze-swilling,
coke-snorting redneck from Texas, Ron Woodroof would've been
your man. And
what's more, he wore a big hat.
To play Ron
Woodroof, McConaughey has backed off two or three notches
from his remarkable
turn in the title role lead of a recent, grueling but
excellent NC-17 picture
called “Killer Joe.” Nobody does this sort of character
better these days; back
when, it was Jack Palance and Richard Widmark who were best
at it.
Early on in
“Dallas Buyers Club,” Ron is diagnosed HIV-positive. Back in
the early 80's, He
would've been one the last guys on earth you'd expect to be
stricken with the
condition. Ron's as skinny as a rail and coughs heavily
between deep drags when
chain smoking as well as riding bulls, boozing heavily and
doing drugs and
threesomes with female prostitutes.
First he
thinks the physician is kidding him about the diagnosis or
mistaken. Then it's
just sheer rage he has for all the medical people around
him, including Eve
Saks, an M.D. played by Jennifer Garner.
After a
regimen of AZT, Ron researches his malady and finds that AZT
is very injurious
to the AIDS virus, yes ... but just about everything else in
his body as well.
On further study, he learns there are other drugs, or ones
being developed, to
prolong the lifespan of HIV-positive patients. Initially,
the doctors have given
Ron 30 days to live.
The
Texas-born misogynistic electrician is not far from being a
full blown anarchist
in terms of life style, so when the FDA and big government
(at large) make it
difficult for Ron to get the medicine he wants and needs to
delay the gloomy
outcome, his bullheaded personality steps up to the task
Texas style.
Dr. Saks is
sympathetic with Ron, but knows that current law is against
him. She incurs more
of his wrath. Garner looks perfectly matched to Eve's
character.
Eventually
Ron is taking trips to Mexico for other drugs that can
extend his life but not
approved by the FDA. His strategies for smuggling them back
across the border
are imaginative and curiously comic.
The buyers
club is born ... so, in spite of the fact Ron is a raging
homophobic, he goes
into business with an HIV-positive man who dresses and lives
as a female. Jared
Leto will likely be part of this winter's Oscar festivities
for his supporting
role as this androgynous young man called Rayon. And there's
already “statue
buzz” for McConaughey too.
Needless to
say, Rayon and Ron don't get along, but both do want to
prolong their own lives
.. and any other HIV-positive people. It's also how they
make a living – running
their buyers club. One could say that Ron has taken the bull
by the horns to get
the meds he needs, as well as for Rayon and anybody else.
Turns out there are
lots of Texans in the movie who do.
If there's
any beauty in “Dallas Buyers Club” it's how having AIDS
gives real purpose to
Ron's life, yet he seems to not even be conscious of that;
he's still that
rough-house, volatile, foul-mouthed cowboy, but with an
attitude signaling he's
acquired the ability to show respect, and care for others –
whether they're gay
or not.
Be more
than just watchful when McConaughey and Garner play their
scene having a nice,
quiet dinner together in a fancy Dallas restaurant. The
volumes it speaks about
Ron's change in demeanor toward females is moving – and
thank goodness, not
cheesy.
So I think,
perhaps, a shout out should go to Jean-Marc Vallée for
crafting “Dallas Buyers
Club” in much the spirit of other cowboys seen in “Ride The
High Country” and
“Brokeback Mountain.”
Copyright © 2013 by Gary Chew.
All rights
reserved.
Chew
Reviews: Movies to Think
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www.imdb.com
www.sacramentopress.com
www.humortimes.com
Hear: Fridays at 89.5 KVMR
Archived: www.kvmr.org
Podcasts: www.peterbcollins.com
www.elkgrovenews.net
Archived reviews from 2003-2011
at www.tulsatvmemories.com
Other stuff at http://www.soundcloud.com/decibellydancer
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