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"Boys Don't Cry" | page 1, 2
As Brandon, Hilary Swank gives a performance that's a
continual revelation. With his cropped, farmer-boy haircut
and a padded tube sock stuffed down his jeans, Swank's
Brandon passes for a man easily enough. In preparation for
the role, Swank spent time in public dressed as a man, and
whether her choices are intuitive or intentional, they work
as a marvelous subterfuge for a character who's striving
(against the cruelty of nature, unfortunately) for
acceptance. Brandon's swagger seems to spring straight from
his joints. His full lips are always just a little cracked
and chapped (few women willingly allow this to happen). You
don't actually ever forget that you're watching a woman --
but that's exactly the point. Brandon conveys his
uncertainty and vulnerability in small, subtle ways, in the
way he avoids a direct glance, or smiles too broadly and
eagerly when he's trying to make friends. Conventionally
speaking, those are "womanly" screens often used to hide
insecurity; it's heartrending to see Brandon succeed so
completely in filling the role of a man -- only to give
himself away to us in these tiny, barely perceptible ways. It's love at first sight when Brandon sees Chloë Sevigny's
Lana, and that goes for us, too. Sevigny seems to end up
being the heart of just about every movie she appears in
(from the abominable "Kids" to the soggy
"The Last Days of Disco"), and "Boys Don't Cry" is no exception. With her
sleepy lizard eyes and her slow, secret smile, she at first
seems a little inscrutable as Lana, a 19-year-old who
sleep-works through the night shift in a spinach-packing
factory, but who pours every essence of her being into her
karaoke singing. Sevigny is the kind of actress who
never gives it all away at once. We see her slowly
becoming more and more comfortable with Brandon, and
simultaneously, we warm up to her too. When the two of them
find themselves in her darkened backyard, playing around
with a Polaroid camera, we get the first clue that she
really, really likes him. She swings away from him, glancing
back slyly, her beguiling smile an unspoken invitation. As an actress, Sevigny's transformative power translates not
just to people (we really start loving Brandon when
she does) but also to things. Her Lana is a tough,
townie girl in beat-up leather, but when she oohs and ahhs
over a selection of cheap silver rings at a
convenience-store checkout, you don't feel pity for the poor
soul because that's all she can afford. You think, "Yes, one
of those would look pretty on her." You want every
good thing for her character, which makes it all the more
wrenching to know that there's trouble ahead. When Brandon
dies, "Boys Don't Cry" reaches an emotional intensity that's
almost operatic. The saddest thing, though, is seeing
Sevigny's Lana crumpled over his corpse -- the way she plays
it, you know that when Brandon went, he took a part of her
with him, too.
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