Brokeback+mountain+deleted+scenes
If you want to read them, the Brokeback Mountain: Story to Screenplay book includes excised scenes in the script section.
Fans of the DVD commentary know a bizarre legend: A single line of Anne Hathaway’s was deleted because it made the audience laugh. In the phone call scene, where Lureen (Hathaway) tells Ennis that Jack died in a “tire iron accident,” her delivery originally included a strange, high-pitched non sequitur. brokeback+mountain+deleted+scenes
After she says, “He was pumping up a flat on his truck… a tire slipped and the iron caught him in the face,” there was a three-second pause. According to the script, Lureen was supposed to coldly add, “Just my luck.” Instead, in a deleted alternate take, Hathaway ad-libbed, “He never did know how to change a tire.” The line was so absurd and dismissive that test audiences snorted. Ang Lee cut it immediately, recognizing that Brokeback Mountain must never undercut its tragedy with dark comedy, no matter how dark. If you want to read them, the Brokeback
Brokeback Mountain (2005), directed by Ang Lee and adapted by Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana from Annie Proulx’s 1997 short story, is widely regarded as a landmark film for its intimate depiction of a complex, forbidden relationship between two men in mid-20th century rural America. During production and editing the filmmakers shot material that didn’t make the final theatrical cut. Deleted scenes and alternate takes—released across DVD/Blu-ray special features, interviews, and press clips—offer additional texture to character motivations, relationships, and the film’s pacing. This article examines those sequences, their narrative and thematic contributions, reasons for removal, and their significance for interpretation. Fans of the DVD commentary know a bizarre