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27 out of 30 people found the following review useful:
A murder in Wyoming, 2 November 2005
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Author:
jotix100 from New York
A young gay man brutally killed by two young men trying to make a point
about their hatred of homosexuals is the basis of Moises Kaufman's
brilliant play seen here a few years ago. On the stage the play is
somewhat detached because of the limitations in the text, but as a
film, adapted for the screen by Mr. Kaufman, the immediacy of the story
is more shocking than in the theater.
"The Laramie Project" is seen in a documentary fashion. The director
and his assistants went to Laramie to investigate the incident that
caused a world wide uproar because of the savage way Matthew Shepard's
death had caused. In recreating the facts, Mr. Kaufman has dramatized
the story by having real actors play the different people in town with
whom he and his collaborators talked during the days of the research
trip.
What comes out about the story is that individually, the citizens of
Laramie were as shocked as everyone else was. After all, they
considerer themselves as pretty tolerant, so why a horrible tragedy
like this could ever happened amongst them? In fact, it only takes a
pair of misguided individuals, who think thought they would make a
statement by inflicting on the unsuspecting Matthew Shepard a
punishment he didn't deserve.
The ensemble cast that play the different parts is an inspired choice.
Mr. Kaufman was lucky in amassing such talent that respond so well to
his commands. Steve Buscemi, Camryn Manhein, Laura Linney, Amy Madigan,
Frances Sternhagen, Christina Ricci, Margo Martindale, Kathleen
Chalfant, Terry Kinney, just to name a few, give excellent readings
about what really occurred in Laramie.
Ultimately, Mr. Kaufman makes his point by just letting the citizens of
Laramie come to terms with the horrible tragedy that shook their town.
27 out of 32 people found the following review useful:
Very important and moving, 7 January 2003
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Author:
jessreed
I knew when I first heard about the project to put The Laramie
Project on-screen that I wanted to see it. I knew, too, that I would
find it moving and touching and probably a bit depressing. What I
did not know, however, is that it would remind me of my own
responsibility to live out loud and honestly. I remember being
numb to Matthew Shepherd's death at the time it occurred, thinking
how this is just one person out of the thousands whose similar
experiences are never heard, so what makes him so special.
What I realized while I watched the film is that it is precisely
because he is no more special than other human being that
makes his story important, because it could be any gay person's
story, even any minority person's story, and whatever draws
attention to matters of hate and violence in the name of fear is
crucial to the fight for equality of all people.
I realized while watching this film that I let loved ones in my life get
away with language that I wouldn't take from a stranger, ignorant
comments about how I don't make them uncomfortable because I
don't "flaunt my gayness." Seemingly harmless words like "live
and let live" are really saying "I will live however I want, and you can
live however you want as long as I don't have to hear about
it."
The Laramie Project reminded me how precious freedom is and
how puritan this supposedly free country still is. I wish this film
would become a part of school curriculum, part of office training on
sensitivity--it should be viewed by everyone of both sides of the
"gay issue." I hope it serves to change some minds.
23 out of 29 people found the following review useful:
A Moving Film, 29 November 2002
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Author:
dmgoehring from Laramie, WY
It took me a long time until I finally rented the DVD version of this. I
live in Laramie, I go to the University. I didn't arrive here until 2000,
but I was, and always have been, a Wyoming resident. Part of me was
curious,
especially with the actors involved, but another part realized how close
to
home this was. How close? My drama teacher Lou Anne Wright played Matthew
Shepards mother (albeit uncredited).
When I first started watching this I was really confused. If they were
taking a documentary approach, why in the hell would they then use real
actors? As I sat and thought about it more, though, it made a bit more
sense. The interviews were recorded only audibly at the time of the
incident
for the play version. You could sit down and reshoot it with the original
citizens, but it would no longer feel natural. Plus I doubt they would've
gotten all the people to consent to being filmed. Remember this is a small
town and anonymity can go a long ways.
Aside from the acted documentary, I really felt they did a good job of
trying to bring Laramie to life. Yes, they did focus a bit too much on the
train tracks which are more or less out of town. I've only even seen them
a
few times in my 3 years here. They seperate Laramie from West Laramie. Not
East Laramie from West Laramie, but Laramie from West Laramie, which
should
tell you something. Aside from that, it felt surreal to watch this. When I
stepped outside my dorm afterwards to return it, I was staring right in
the
face of the hotel sign that at the time of filming read "Hate is Not a
Laramie Value." I drove down third street and saw Laramie Lumber, I drove
back on 4th and saw the antiquated Spic & Span Laundry. When they talk
about
how they drove past Walmart when they went out to kill him, I knew that
road. I've driven home on that road many a time.
The characters were also extremely well-acted. For every character I saw
portrayed on screen, I've known at least one Wyoming resident that was
exactly like them. While some of the performances may have seemed extreme
and hokey to some, I felt they had it down pat. I laughed to myself when
Buscemi's character spelled out H-O-P-E for emphasis...I've heard the same
silly thing done the same way by the same sort of people. Aside from "Live
and Let Live" which I can honestly say I've never heard here in 20 years
of
WY residence (yet was emphasized over and over in the film), I've heard
many
of the same statements said almost verbatim by people I know.
The story, of course, is touching, but the route they went of making it
the
story of Laramie vs. the story of Matthew Shepard made it more than just a
movie-of-the-week style thing. You can feel the emotions seeping through
the
screen. At the angel protest, I felt like jumping up and shouting down the
bigoted guy leading the anti-gay side.
For its authenticity and heart-felt storytelling, I can't help but give
this
one a strong recommendation.
16 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
Brilliant and moving, 18 November 2004
Author:
Jenna (flicker_and_fade) from USA
An incredible movie that was brilliantly cast. I watched this movie my freshmen year of college and have revisited it time after time. There is never a lull in the movie--it hits hard and fast with character shifts and emotional dialogue that never sounds forced coming from the actors' mouths. It is the dialogue, transcribed from hundreds of hours of actual interviews with the people of Laramie, that gives this heinous crime a whole new dimension. Though the bigotry that is illustrated is hard to watch, as you observe the courage that certain people in the town showed, you might just find your faith in the human race restored. A must see for everyone.
10 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Heart-Rending & Important, 28 December 2004
Author:
sparklecat
"The Laramie Project" is a film version of the play of the same name,
culled from interviews with real residents of the town of Laramie,
Wyoming in the wake of the horrific murder of Matthew Shepard. There
are a lot of famous faces on hand (Steve Buscemi, Christina Ricci,
Peter Fonda, Janeane Garofalo, Joshua Jackson, and many others), but
the film's power comes from its story, not its stars.
Presented with the voices of Laramie - and ultimately, of America - one
is forced to confront the realities of violence and hate in a way that
is intense, even infuriating, but extremely worthwhile. An intelligent,
complex, and very relevant piece of work.
8 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
another worthwhile HBO movie.., 14 August 2002
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Author:
Embley from canada
i was very impressed with this documentary-style tv movie. i
appreciated the fact that the filmmaker took this approach, giving a
sense (at least i hope) of the people on whom these interviews are
based, while allowing a buffer zone so that the real people are not
subjected to more publicity OR made to look stupid because of their
personal beliefs. i thought it was a very wise approach to take and
allows more of an unbiased POV in many ways than would a straight up
documentary. not to say that this piece was unbiased - it wasn't - and
i don't think it should have been. but the filmmaker did not take any
low blows and that was refreshing. the way the whole piece was put
together was different - i could feel the theatrical aspect coming in,
the visuals were much more fractured than a standard tv movie, and i
could REALLY appreciate that this was not just another murder story
come to life on screen.
thank you for not doing a re-enactment of the crime! i think it was WAY
more effective to hear it described by people. i found the laramie
project to be horrifying and touching, and i wish more pieces were made
that hit at such a gut level. i won't forget this movie.
14 out of 21 people found the following review useful:
Powerful, moving, 6 January 2003
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Author:
Wayne Malin (wwaayynnee51@hotmail.com) from United States
Excellent cable movie dealing with the horrendous murder of gay Matthew
Shepard in 1998 in Laramie, Wyoming. A theatre group went to the town and
interviewed the citizens and came back with 400 hours of material. This
became a play with actors playing the towns citizens. It's now been done as
an HBO film with a top-notch cast playing the citizens. There are also
reenactments of the trial of the two murderers and their convictions. This
is definetely a strange film but totally fascinating with many powerful
moments. The scene where Matthew Shepard's father addresses one of the
killers of his son is gut-wrenching--it's hard to believe it's just an actor
reading dialogue.
Previous posters have complained about not using the real townspeople
talking. I don't think that's a valid argument--many of these people
probably wouldn't want to appear on film and would they really want to go
through recreations of the trial and the protests outside?
Also, there's not one bad acting job from anybody in the cast but special
honors go to Camryn Manheim, Christina Ricci and Amy Madigan.
A powerful, painful film. A definite must-see for everybody.
9 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Thoughtful, Stunning., 10 September 2003
Author:
SunRock17 from Boston, MA
A work that is exceptional both in terms of its structure and in terms of
the unique nature of the presentation. It brings into sharp focus many of
the complex elements of a horror like this and the profound effects which
it
has on the many disparate participants.
The quality of the acting is superb evidencing a dedication to the
material
that goes beyond mere craftwork; many of the performances are obviously
from
the heart and the soul. Dylan Baker, Amy Madigan, Jeremy Davies, Peter
Fonda, Joshua Jackson, and Camryn Manheim are stellar. The courtroom
speech
by Matthew's Father is historical. The direction is challenging and
engaging.
It takes a truly cold, trite, and hardened heart to dismiss such a moving
film predicated solely upon the prejudices, regressive political
posturing,
and obvious homophobia brought to such dismissals.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
A Powerful Statement, 3 February 2008
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Author:
gftbiloxi (gftbiloxi@yahoo.com) from Biloxi, Mississippi
Matthew Shepard was about two months short of his twenty-second birth
when he was robbed, beaten, tied to a fence post and left to die in a
rural area of Wyoming. The man who found him at first thought he was a
scarecrow. Rushed to Poudre Valley Hospital at Fort Collins, he died on
12 October 1998--and when Russell Henderson and Aaron McKinney were
arrested for the crime they resorted to a defense known as "gay panic."
Matthew Shepherd had propositioned them, they said, and they were so
horrified that they killed him in response.
The gay community and numerous civil rights watchdog groups were
outraged by the defense, and as more and more facts came to light it
seemed that the crime was somewhat more complicated than Henderson and
McKinney wanted the public to know. Witnesses stated that Henderson and
McKinney had specifically targeted Shepherd because he was gay. After
much legal wrangling, Henderson pled guilty and testified against
McKinney, who was convicted; after still more legal wrangling, and at
the request of Shepherd's parents, McKinney escaped the death penalty
but has no chance of parole.
The case made headlines from end of the United States to the other and
prompted numerous calls for Hate Crimes legislation, which had long
been stalled both at the state and federal level. And in the midst of
the confusion, chaos, and controversy, Moises Kaufman and the members
of The Tectonic Theatre Project arrived on the scene, interviewing more
than two hundred people about their thoughts and feelings on the case.
These were shaped into THE LARAMIE PROJECT, a drama that debuted in
2000 and which has since shocked, impressed, and deeply moved audiences
from coast to coast.
On the stage, THE LARAMIE PROJECT is played by eight performers who
enact the numerous interview subjects in a three act, three hour
performance on a largely bare stage. When filmed by HBO in 2002, it was
reduced in length by about half and each interview subject was
performed by a different actor--some of them members of the Techtonic
Theatre Project, some of them well-known actors such as Laura Linney
and Peter Fonda. The result is indeed powerful... but not as effective
as the stage version, for on film it tends be a series of readings by
"talking heads," a sort of pseudo-documentary, rather than as a
cohesive whole.
That said, the great difference between the film and the original
script is one of balance. On stage, THE LARAMIE PROJECT takes no sides
per se; it simply sets forth the words and allows the audience to
judge. On screen, it is distinctly slanted, cutting much of the
commentary that gave the original such remarkable balance. Even so, and
although far outstripped by the stage version, it is a powerful voice
for equality, tolerance, and simple human decency. Recommended.
GFT, Amazon Reviewer
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
See the play, 27 March 2006
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Author:
oalvarez-2 from New York City
While this film is very powerful for those unfamiliar with the incident and/or the play, I think it loses quite a bit of the depth that the stage version has. The play is a sparkling piece of experimental theater that invariably is produced by small ensembles taking on six to ten roles each. The set is minimalist, usually containing no more than a few chairs and a table. When you take away the visuals, and you take away the famous actors, what are you left with? The words. I think that the movie version takes away from that, with the flashy camera angles and editing. The characters (as they became in the movie; they are more true-to-life in the play) were pretty well-portrayed in the movie, with some disappointing exceptions (Jedediah Schultz, for example). The story still gets through, and you still understand that this is an issue of enormous gravity. But I reiterate my opinion that the play is much better.
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