What a brutal matchup. Voted for Brokeback Mountain in a matchup that could have gone either way for me.
Lisa Fuller - 1 week ago
This vote might have hurt the most. The first time seeing Ladybird, I felt like it was speaking directly to my high school self- an incredibly accurate portrayal of experiences I had as a teen in the late 90s/early 00s. But when I think about Brokeback Mountain, I think about the gut wrenching shirt scene towards the end of the film, and I'm almost brought to tears just remembering that moment. The beauty and incredible, utter heartbreak of Brokeback Mountain have stuck with me since its release, and that pull won me over.
Mitka Alperovitz - 1 week ago
Brokeback has too much CGI, it just takes me out of the film.
All I see is pixels, munching grass
Danny Cox - 2 weeks ago
Larry McMurtry is my favorite writer. I have all but a few of his books and I love what he and Diana Ossana did adapting Brokeback Mountain. But film is a directors medium so I have to go Ladybird! There are moments that have stuck with me since the first viewing of Ladybird that haven't left my mind since. A perfect gem of movie. My apologies to Mr. McMurtry.
Leave a Comment
Give others the chance to vote.
Share this poll, because the more votes the better.
What a brutal matchup. Voted for Brokeback Mountain in a matchup that could have gone either way for me.
This vote might have hurt the most. The first time seeing Ladybird, I felt like it was speaking directly to my high school self- an incredibly accurate portrayal of experiences I had as a teen in the late 90s/early 00s. But when I think about Brokeback Mountain, I think about the gut wrenching shirt scene towards the end of the film, and I'm almost brought to tears just remembering that moment. The beauty and incredible, utter heartbreak of Brokeback Mountain have stuck with me since its release, and that pull won me over.
Brokeback has too much CGI, it just takes me out of the film.
All I see is pixels, munching grass
Larry McMurtry is my favorite writer. I have all but a few of his books and I love what he and Diana Ossana did adapting Brokeback Mountain. But film is a directors medium so I have to go Ladybird! There are moments that have stuck with me since the first viewing of Ladybird that haven't left my mind since. A perfect gem of movie. My apologies to Mr. McMurtry.