sunny@sun.uucp (Sunny Kirsten) (11/02/84)
[] I've just returned from the premiere showing of this wonderful film, and just have to share the experience. This documentary of the rise and fall of Harvey Milk, Mayor Moscone, and Dan White is not idle entertainment, it will make you think and feel deeply during it's showing, and will probably leave your life permanently changed by it's end. how? It doesn't matter whether you walk into the theater straight or gay, by the time you walk out you'll be impressed by the universality of the *human* values of Harvey Milk, and by the inhumanity of our court system. Most of all, you'll want everyone you know to see this film. -- exit {ucbvax,decvax,ihnp4}!sun!sunny (Sunny Kirsten of Sun Microsystems Inc.)
sdyer@bbncca.ARPA (Steve Dyer) (11/05/84)
I'd like to add my own recommendation for this documentary. Even with all its positive advance publicity, I entered the theater with a lot of scepticism--I knew little about Harvey Milk other than what I had gleaned from idle reading of the Advocate, and I was expecting to see the solemn, earnest canonization of a third-rate politico whose only claim to fame was that he was the first openly gay S.F. supervisor, and that he was tragically, killed along with Mayor George Moscone in the now-famous Dan White murder case. It was nice to have my preconceptions swept away by the power and eloquence of this movie. The documentary is a montage of archival photographs, TV footage, and repeated "talking head" interviews, arranged chronologically and narrated by Harvey Fierstein. Here, Harvey Milk emerges as a top-notch, street-smart politician: someone who not only cared about the needs of his constituents, gay, straight, elderly, and Asian, but who knew the value of working within the City Hall infrastructure and manipulating the city's media to ensure that his issues were addressed. Note the title: this is not "The Life and Times of Harvey Milk", for the central issue is not Milk himself, but the galvanizing effect his candidacy and election had upon the San Francisco community, and the tragic events of his assasination and the subsequent trial of Dan White. What happened in San Francisco in the late 70's was, for most of us, only a 3 minute segment on the evening news, or a column of newsprint. But the audience here is asked to experience the elation of Milk's election and the anger and tragedy of the subsequent events, as if for the first time. It is a cathartic experience. -- /Steve Dyer {decvax,linus,ima,ihnp4}!bbncca!sdyer sdyer@bbncca.ARPA
shore@adobe.UUCP (Andrew Shore) (04/03/85)
In case you hadn't noticed, "The Times of Harvey Milk" won the Oscar for best documentary. I highly recommend this movie. It is an incredibly touching film recounting the life, times and death of the first openly gay elected official of a major US city (Harvey was a San Francisco city supervisor). The movie is made up of still photos and news film footage of his life and political activities intermixed with the personal and political recollections of several people who knew him. It is narrated in the wonderful basso of playwright/actor Harvey Fierstein. You will laugh, you will cry (several times), you will get very angry as the film recounts the events of his assination (along with mayor George Moscone by former supervisor Dan White), White's trial (the infamous "twinkie defense") and the ensuing "White Night" riots. What can I say to make you see this film? It has met with very wide critical acclaim. I only hope it is getting the distribution it deserves. [I'm a tiny bit biased -- an old college roommate of mine was the associate producer.] --Andy