天使在美国

欧美剧美国,意大利2003

主演:阿尔·帕西诺,梅丽尔·斯特里普,艾玛·汤普森,帕特里克·威尔森,玛丽-露易丝·帕克,贾斯汀·柯克,杰弗里·怀特,本·申克曼,詹姆斯·克伦威尔

导演:迈克·尼科尔斯

播放地址

 剧照

天使在美国 剧照 NO.1天使在美国 剧照 NO.2天使在美国 剧照 NO.3天使在美国 剧照 NO.4天使在美国 剧照 NO.5天使在美国 剧照 NO.6天使在美国 剧照 NO.13天使在美国 剧照 NO.14天使在美国 剧照 NO.15天使在美国 剧照 NO.16天使在美国 剧照 NO.17天使在美国 剧照 NO.18天使在美国 剧照 NO.19天使在美国 剧照 NO.20
更新时间:2023-10-04 22:04

详细剧情

故事发生於20世纪80年代中期的纽约,《千禧年降临》的第一幕介绍了中心人物路易·爱恩森(Louis Ironson)。他是一名犹太人,与同性恋爱人普莱尔·沃尔特(Prior Walter)住在一起。但普莱尔後来发现自己患有艾滋病,社会在当时对此病仍然知之甚少,路易无法承受住巨大的压力便抛弃了对方搬了出去。与此同时,在城市中另一方,也有一位名为乔·皮特(Joe Pitt)的共和党律师。他是一位摩门教徒,同时也在尽力压制自己的同性恋倾向。剧中,臭名昭著的麦卡锡主义者罗依·康(Roy Cohn)为他提供了一份十分有前途的工作,而乔并没有立刻接受,因为他担心自己服用安定上瘾的妻子哈珀(Harper)。   随着剧情发展,普莱尔发现经常有鬼魂和天使来拜访他,还被这些人称为先知;乔在自己的宗教信仰和性取向的矛盾中痛苦挣扎;路易十分後悔抛弃了爱人,时刻受到良心的折磨;...

 长篇影评

 1 ) Seeing the World Through the Eyes of Liberals

It is witty and imaginative. Meryl Streep is my favorite, Al Pacino is his usual yelling self. Maybe it seemed rather naïve like how West Wing is naïve. Because both are idealistic Hollywood types attempting at describing the world of politics, or analyzing why conservatives are conservatives.

In addition to all the big name actors employed by the series, the script is awesome. A few lines I love:

1.
Roy Cohn (Al Pacino): A Republican hot-shot lawyer was informed by his long time personal doctor that he has AIDS.

“Your problem is that you are hung up on words, on labels, that you believe they mean what they seem to mean,” Cohn says. “Homosexuals are men who know nobody and who nobody knows, who have zero clout? Does this sound like me? I have sex with men. But unlike nearly every other man of whom this is true, I bring the guy I’m screwing to the White House and President Reagan smiles at us and shakes his hand. I, have clout. I’m not a homosexual with AIDs. What I have is liver cancer. I’m a heterosexual that likes to fuck around with men.”

2.
Joe Pitt (A Republican, a Morman, a closeted gay, and a lawyer) says to his first gay lover:

"You democrats are so naïve, you believe things can be perfected. If you could accept reality as it is, if you could accept the in-perfectibility of human being, then you will see why I am a Republican. We are the realists."

3.
So the story goes that God was tempted to leave Heaven after he had witnessed men’s progress. He wanted more adventure of his own! Eventually God walked out on Heaven on 1909, during the time that San Francisco had the biggest earthquake (Heaven quake. Apparently Heaven is in San Francisco, ha). So the angels God left behind tried to manage on their own throughout the entire 20th century and watching human ran the world to the ground. So they send an angel (Emma Thompson) to see the Prophet, a gay man lives in New York City and recently diagnosed with AIDs. The Angel asked the Prophet to stop human progress, to stop time and maybe to turn back time so God might return.

At the end the young gay man, who was given the title of Prophet went to heaven (i.e. San Francisco), to stand in front the chief angels (all look like some kind of homeless), he said (something to this affect, I don’t have the exact transcript)

“I don’t want to be a Prophet, and I don’t want to stop time. Progress, migration, and change are modernity. Human has to desire, even when we desire to be still, it is still a desire. As for God, if he dares to show his face again here after all that he had left behind, after all the destruction and death had befallen us, I say, we sue the bastard. How dare he walk out on us? He has to pay!”

-More Quotes and Trivia from Amazon.com
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B0001I2BUI/104-7485479-5286314?v=glance&vi=quotes-trivia

 2 ) 知识分子不成气

秋说重看这个,我就也跟风.

奇怪,第一次看糊里糊涂觉得有点高深,重新看轻松了不少倒觉得一点也不复杂.

1.明明4个G和一个女人是主角,后来在各大奖项风光是两个配角,黑人CC磕药MM倒拿的配角奖,搞敬老也太明显.

2.政治的,麦卡锡那一套;宗教的,犹太人,摩门教徒;社会的,同性恋.

3.其实就两条线,AL pacino那个真实的恶棍一条;4个虚构的基一条.4个G,右派躲在柜子里,左派满嘴愤青理论结果爱人得了aids就跑了;得aids那位,看第2遍加阅读相关"文献"才知道,敢情把丫塑造成耶稣来着(我对宗教象征不敏感),也太夸张了.

唯一善良可爱的还是那个最娘的黑人.

看到一些长篇大论的探讨,无非是"解析人物"的,BTW,<天使在美国>确实红,主要在左派知识分子中间,当然,尤其是gay里面.那年一大堆奖给了它,与其说是本身作品好,不如说是评论界和业内对于左派认同的一种表示.话说回来,好莱钨那些基佬未必个个是知识分子,真要说上座率,不如看唱歌跳舞的.

看到一个笑话,说民主党爱激动,投票却很不积极,远不如共和党.

知识分子都清高,喜欢"拿作品说话",还要显示其"叫好就不能叫座"的身段.

<天使在美国>在美国"红"了上10年,不知道这次麦凯恩会不会象跳水的小马修来个"惊天大逆转",呵呵,manhunt的创始人居然都给他捐了很多钱.

<天使在美国>得再多的奖,可能都没有BBM深入人心,而一部两小时的电影给人的影响,未必比一分钟内的一次dive让人激动.....不是有人留言了,天啊,不就是一块愚蠢的奥运金牌吗,有什么大不了?可是为什么,我会哭的象个孩子?

 3 ) 天使在美国

台词真的太精彩了,几乎每段对手戏的台词都潜藏很多政治宗教哲学等元素的道理。
幻想与现实之间的交替,人在重压之下所幻想的事物也许就是人生中所无法放下的东西。普莱特在爱人离开之后想到的是早点死去,自己无法独自承受病痛的折磨,看到天使还有先人有一种希望自己能解脱的意味,而罗伊看中的则是自己的律师身份,这也是他拥有现今话语权的来源,他临死时看到自己以前在法庭上的迫害对象也是一种对自己以前犯下的错误的悔恨,虽然自己嘴上并不承认,但是却始终无法从内心上摆脱这个阴影,这是他律师生涯的污点。
路易虽然一肚子的愤青理论,但自己遇到考验却也无法做到自己口中的正确,说着从不和不爱的人做爱,却在离开男友时为了惩罚自己或是只是单纯发泄而招人约炮,把自己的过错怪罪到其他人身上,攻击他人的弱点来变相安慰自己 。但是结尾那段洗白真是完全把我感动到了,这样一个顽固的人却终于肯承认自己的错误,愿意回到男友身边,如果我是他男友肯定无法拒绝。
乔可以说是最惨的一个了,到了结尾竟然没有他的镜头,反而是大家都离他而去,其实他只是一只在考虑其他的人的想法而无法果断的做出许多决定,他其实并没有做错什么,可能他这次真的应为喜欢上了路易而想要为自己争取一下。
黑人同志作为全篇的联系人,贯穿在所有人物之中,同时也依靠着自己特有的弱势群体的位置引发出许多发人深省的对话。
也许天使是自由的象征,而剧中的角色都属于美国中不受待见的群体,天使在美国也就意味着,自由与平等的社会正在美国建立,美国将会是能包容这些各个群体,一个拥有天使的国家。

 4 ) 如何看懂一部宗教片

   这是一部不容易看懂的电影短剧,充满隐喻、意象、幻觉,梦境、臆测,假象。
  影片由几段故事分别叙述,第一部分是千禧年降临,第二部分是重建。
  以下的电影能够帮助你更好的理解这部电影:
  康斯坦丁
  驱魔人
  天使之城
  魔鬼代言人
  穆赫兰道
  启示录
  耶稣受难记
  梦之安魂曲
  发条橙
  捕梦网
  时时刻刻
  七宗罪

        (一)现实
   1980年代的十年的艾滋被发现,蔓延的十年。人人唯恐得艾滋,宗教上,艾滋是对大罪大恶之人的惩罚,剥夺大恶之人对疾病痛苦的抵抗力。美国是艾滋最初发现地,同性恋者被认为是这种病毒的唯一携带者和传播者。艾滋病是邪恶,罪恶,原罪,不可接触的。美国人一直争论的色社会问题就包括同性恋权利,堕胎的合法性,宗教复兴等,这些在电影里面都或多或少的提到。同时,80年代是里根时代,里根在美国人看来是个近乎完美的总统,有严谨的宗教信仰,英俊的面容,坚决的政治态度,强大的统治能力,里根有近乎上帝一样的魅力。
     影片的名字已经表明了立场,在一片混乱的世界里面,就算天使也难以解决,只有通过死亡,当事情已经到了绝境,杀死一切重新开始才是唯一解决之道。
    美国这个宗教国家需要一个超力量来处理当时的混乱,或许是天使,或许是死亡。

        (二)关键议题
   同性恋 。1980年代,即使在美国,同性恋也不是一个可以公开的话题,异装癖,同性恋牵扯到艾滋,宗教,法律,家庭,,作为摩门教徒和共和党政客,joe努力逃避自己是一个同性恋者现实,只是他一直认为可以通过自己的力量改变性向,结果是一团糟,被一个小gay路易斯掰弯。
    性。性是个难以回避的话题。joe的妻子因为长年在家,而又无法和丈夫沟通,性生活也没有,因为长期服用药物,最后依赖药物成性,产生了幻觉。有一个幻觉是她钻进冰箱,来到一个冰雪的包裹的国度。
  宗教。这里包括了摩门教(美国一个基督教的小教派),天主教,基督教,犹太教。宗教的旨意在电影里面十分明显,几场梦境,这次幻觉,都是宗教意义的再现。生命充满束缚、恐惧,世人渴望爱、被爱、渴望救赎。在这些宗教里面,同性恋都不被允许。
   充满隐喻的台词比比皆是:
   身体是灵魂的花园。
   --你去哪里,哪里就有魔鬼,是不是?
     --是,到处都有。

        (三) 假象,幻觉
    明白电影里面角色产生的幻觉和假象对理解这部电影是很有帮助的。Joe的妻子哈珀因为服用药物和和丈夫没有交流,所以虚拟了很多任务,如开始的国际旅游代理商,还有在和Joe争吵后,幻想自己来到一个冰雪覆盖的世界。
    普莱尔·沃尔顿发现自己得了艾滋,恋人又抛弃自己,于是在寝室和Joe的妻子哈珀一样产生幻觉,并且和哈珀重叠在一起,于是两个素未谋面的陌生人就在各自的幻境中相遇。
    最后的天堂入口是此景:天堂的入口阶梯燃烧,通向天堂的路径向上。小天使们在天堂的废墟嬉戏奔跑。古巴比伦式建筑,天堂的广场据记者无数的天使,众天使忙碌不已,各大洲的权天使在古建筑背景的长桌上商议,人被祝福后才可以复生。
   (四)演员和角色
    这部电影里面,梅丽尔斯特里普Meryl Streep ,乌玛汤普森Emma Thompson 。其中梅丽尔饰演了影片开头的主持葬礼的白胡子犹太教神父,乔·皮特的母亲两个角色;乌玛饰演了老流浪汉,天使长,护士。
    阿尔·帕西诺Al Pacino 饰演罗伊.科恩,有钱有势有权的大律师,被检查出患有艾滋,在世俗和行业的压力下,罗伊威胁私人医生隐瞒艾滋的事实。病痛和罪恶感一直折磨他,不断产生幻觉,被一个宿敌的鬼魂纠缠。他无法被原谅,他是魔鬼,诱惑他人犯罪,诅咒这个世界。他曾经想忏悔,想帮助Joe,最终还是孤独终老。
     普莱尔·沃尔顿和路易斯是一对四年的同性恋人,普莱尔·沃尔顿被检查出的了艾滋,当他把这件事告诉路,路的害怕更多于爱,卢克唯恐自己也得艾滋,却又放不下恋人。这个时候,只有有异装癖的朋友不时到医院探望,直到后来天使邀请普莱尔做死亡先知。

     (五)结局
   结局,一切雨过天晴,一目了然,归属地狱的就死去,有爱的人们就获得原谅,该离开的离开,该活下去的活下去,人人都获得自己的命运。重生的普莱尔在天使像下享受自己的生活:一个和煦的冬日,暖中有冷,天空雾蒙蒙的,于是阳光有了一种质感的显现。在秋天,湖对面的那些树木一片金黄,太阳灿烂的穿透树林,在蓝色天空的映衬下,那忧伤的秋蓝,树木明亮胜过寻常草木。
  
   每个人都有自己的命运,你可以反抗,但不能超越。

 5 ) 《天使在人间》人性几何

《天使在美国》Angels in America分成2部:《千禧年降临》Millennium Approach和《变革〉Perestroika。该剧涉及到了宗教信仰、种族、政治、艾滋病、同性恋、爱情、疾病、死亡等多个主题,内容非常饱满,人物非常立体,剧情非常紧凑,是美国近年来最有影响力的戏剧之一

故事发生在20世纪80年代的纽约:

路易(Louis Ironson)是法院的一名书记员。他是犹太人。他与同性恋爱人普莱尔(Prior Walter)生活在一起。但普莱尔得了艾滋病。当时的社会对此病还知之甚少。路易无法承受住巨大的压力便抛弃了Prior。

乔(Joe Pitt)是共和党律师,他是摩门教徒。他的妻子哈珀服用安定上瘾,有妄想症。乔努力地压制着自己的同性恋倾向。因为都在法院工作,路易和乔勾搭上了。

臭名昭著的麦卡锡主义者罗依(Roy Cohn)是乔的老板,他为乔提供了一份在华盛顿十分有前途的工作。其实罗依也是一位同志,此时他也得了艾滋病住进了医院。负责护理他的护士黑人同志伯利兹(Belize)恰好是普莱尔的好友。

普莱尔在求生和赴死之间痛苦徘徊;路易饱受着良心的谴责,却又不知所措;乔则在自己的宗教信仰和性取向之间矛盾挣扎。

就像前面说的那样,该剧涉及多个主题,可以聊的东西很多。我对美国的宗教信仰、种族、政治这些主题并不陌生,但在中国的大环境里,我并没有遇到这些方面的困扰,所以,我可以理解该剧在这些方面的探讨和思考,但不会有切肤感受。触及我们内心深处的往往是也可能发生在自己身上的事情。比如说,我们也置身于在当时社会对于同性恋的接纳程度和对于艾滋病的认知程度的情况下,我们的爱人得了艾滋病,我们的心理活动会是什么样的?我们的具体行动又会是什么样?

很多人性的问题是不能假设的。尤其是处于感情之中的人,千万不要用假设来探讨这样的人性问题,因为这种假设有点像钓鱼执法,也有点是无中生有。你能得到的无非就是两种结果,一种是满意的谎言,另外一种是赤裸裸的现实。前者是自欺欺人,后者我们未必能够接受。这又是何必呢。

这样的人性问题同样也不适合拿出来讨论。因为它们很少有对错。生而为人,我们本来就是不完美的。我们身上本来就是有懦弱、胆小、虚伪、虚荣、懒惰、自私等等所谓人性的“恶”。有很多与生俱来,或者受生活环境影响,在我们身上根深蒂固的东西,是很难逾越的。拿自己的尺子凭空去丈量别人,是蛮横无理的;所以,被别人用尺子来丈量自己,是不可接受的。

遇到人性的问题,我们只能看别人是怎么做的,然后想自己会怎么做。这时候才是最真实的自己,因为此时会少很多顾忌。将心比心,似乎我们可以理解更多的人,而不是做个圣女婊。当然,有很多人连想的勇气都没有,还有些人虽然想了也还是没有答案。其实也不用担心,当那一刻真的发生的时候,你会被逼着做出反应,你的所作所为就是你。你即便不作为,也是一种作为。

所以,我对剧中的路易并没有任何情感上的喜欢和不喜欢。我只能说他处于我理解的正常人范围内。当他自己的男友普莱尔得了艾滋病的时候,他害怕,因为他害怕自己会被传染;他慌张,因为他不知道怎么照顾普莱尔;因为不知所措,他也表达不出更多,只是跟普莱尔说,我们不能在一起了,便离开了。看似冷漠,其实纠结。此时的路易就像碰到了一件自己搞不定的事情而焦躁的小孩,他虽然选择逃避,但心里却一直没有跨过去。他深知自己还爱着普莱尔,他每天受着良心的谴责,于是他一直在逃避和自己的真实情感之间撕扯。这其实是他痛苦的心理建设过程。最终,等他经历过几番心灵拷问自己之后,他明白了自己要的是什么,自己能够承担什么,自己是否有能力去做什么,所以最终他才会坚定地回到了普莱尔身边。

经过这样的思考,或许我们会更宽容地对待周围的人,也觉得其实这个世间并没有那么丑陋。

 6 ) 六个小时的对白很intense

好久没看这么长的片子了,HBO的电视剧,六个小时。早闻是美剧里面的神作,以前也租过,后来因为退会的原因只看了一点点就把碟子还了。也还好,我想那个时候比现在能够理解的东西会更少。

基本上看完后总结其实剧情真的没有什么,主要都是在对白。任意一个时间点,任意一段对白,都可以让人思考半天。因此,看这片子让我觉得非常intense,虽然没什么大起大落的情节。他们谈论的东西也是我比较感兴趣的,比如关于种族,政治,宗教,死亡,等等,这跟之前某人推荐我看的也是对白为主的片子《Before Sunset》要让我喜欢多了,后者探讨爱情等人生细节为多而显得更小家子气,而《Angels in America》这部片子是从80年代的同性恋与艾滋病出发,汇览文明的进展与社会的变迁。

当时一直不停的暂停摘抄台词,比如一开场的Rabbi讲话就把我震了:

"……This woman. I did not know this woman. I cannot accurately describe her attributes nor do justice to her dimensions. She was not a person, but a whole kind of a person. The ones that crossed the ocean that brought with us to America, the villages of Russia and Lithuania. And how we struggled, and how we fought, for the family, for the Jewish home.
  
  Descendents of this immigrant woman, you do not grow up in America. You, your children, and their children with the goyish names. You do not live in America. No such place exists. Your clay is the clay of some Litvak shtetl. Your air is the air of the steppes because she carried that old world on her back across the ocean in a boat, and she put it down on Grand Concourse Avenue. Or on Flatbush. You can never make that crossing that she made for such great voyages in this world do not anymore exist. But every day of your lives, the miles, that voyage from that place to this one, you cross, every day.
  
  You understand me? In you, that journey is."

再比如:

天使现身对Prophet说:
    
  "...There is no Zion save where you are. If you cannot find your heart's desire in your own backyard, you never lost it to begin with."

然后还有一句巨精辟的让我爆笑的:

  "...The white cracker who wrote the national anthem set the word "free" to a note so high nobody could reach it."

举不胜举。

唯一比较遗憾的是本人英文太差,这个剧作人英文太好,他们的对白都非常文绉绉的,在好些时候都因为用词艰深而难以理解。有字幕还让我有看不懂的,这片子大概是第一个。

 7 ) Every American is related to Prior Walter (Such an idiotic title back then. Every American White Guy? Maybe?)

Introduction In the past century, the LGBT in America have fought long and hard for their equal rights. The majority of Americans are now in favor of homosexual marriage, while as lately as 1989 merely a little more than 10 percent of the nation liked this idea (Smith). Gay writers have played a big role in this shift, as Christopher Bram writes: “The gay revolution began as a literary revolution” (qtd. in Smith). According to him, The Second World War and the civil rights movements in the 1960s have helped normalizing gay’s social image, however that progress was impeded by the epidemic of AIDS. Gram argues: “Antigay politicians now used the disease to resist campaigns for tolerance and equality” (qtd. in Smith). The circumstance is especially so in the Reagan Era as he championed traditional family and Christian values, protecting the mainstream rich and neglecting the needs of those who pose alternative religious and political stances, especially gays and AIDS patients. The gay rights movement retreated, and they desperately needed a voice to preclude from being ostracized and misread by the mainstream values. So, gay writings were “invigorated” (Smith). This is when Tony Kushner’s Angels in America: a Gay Fantasia on National Themes stepped on the stage of history. In 1991, the first part of Kushner’s play, Angels in America: Approaching the Millennium received its premier in San Francisco, and the second part: Perestroika premiered in 1992. By the time that Kushner officially published the complete work in 1995, Angels had already earned one Pulitzer and two Tony Awards accompanied with a great number of other awards and nominations. Being a Jewish homosexual, Kushner was well aware of the problems described by Bram, and he saliently highlighted AIDS and homosexuality at the center of the stage. Among the eight main characters, all the five males are homosexual and two of these five have AIDS. Kushner puts them in New York City in 1985, amidst the Reagan Era, and lets them demonstrate the intolerance of the conservative mainstream. The right-wing thinking at the time prevailed, and the Reaganite Republicanism encouraged prejudiced opinions on gays. Every gay character of Kushner’s suffers impact from that environment. Prior Walter, Louis Ironson, and Belize are out of the closet. And according to Prior, he and Belize even used to be drag queens (Part One, Act II, Scene 5). They are fine with exposing their sexuality to the unaccepting world. On the other hand, Joe Pitt and Roy Cohn are very much closeted. Contrary to the attitude of Prior’s group, Joe and Roy both reject the identity of gay – Joe responses “No, I’m not!” immediately as Louis comments “Well oh boy, a gay Republican” (Part One, Act I, Scene 6), and Roy delivers a big speech to his doctor about power contrasting gayness after being diagnosed of AIDS (Part One, Act I, Scene 9). However, whether revealing or concealing their sexuality, they all face both fear and threat from AIDS, and the censure from the conservative mainstream. Since the existence of contradictions in the characters’ sexuality, religious, moral, and political inclinations, throughout the play, they are confronted with choices with regard to political, religious, and personal identity. The character Louis particularly takes an ambiguous stance on political and social issues of the country as he asserts “I’m ambivalent” (Part One, Act III, Scene 2). The other characters, though not saying so and some -- such as Roy Cohn-- even seeming very sure of their own view and place in the world, all have a trait of ambivalence in their character. And as they go through “several separate but inevitably intertwined relationships that are complicated by homosexuality and AIDS” (McCallum 3), the result, as Ranen Omer-Sherman observes, is that “By the end of the drama each of these characters will have not only experienced, but embraced, startling changes and shifts in identity” (Omer-Sherman 16). How does a play deliver its meaning if it is full of ambivalence and doubt? This question can be one of the reasons why critic Lee Siegel called it in The New Republic, “a second-rate play written by a second-rate playwright who happens to be gay,” and an “overwrought, coarse, posturing, formulaic mess” (Siegel). Notwithstanding Siegel’s opinion, it is David Savran’s assertion that the ambivalence in each individual character is not messy at all, but as a whole unequivocally champions a certain ideology – liberal pluralism (Savran 219), which he thinks remains the best hope for tolerance and change (Savran 223). I am more inclined to agree with Savran and do not think that Angels is a mess, and I see a strong connection between the ambivalent characters and the idea of tolerance and acceptance. As Kushner said in a video interview: [I]f the play works, you just feel everybody go “Oh my God, we are not isolated individuals, lost one another, and we don’t stop at our own skins. We share something.” It’s like a momentary experience of the universal mind. (Kushner, interview by Signature Theater Company) That is, no matter how queer and unique the characters are, they can be reached, related to, and united through their ambivalent identities. The thesis intends to examine the traits of “ambivalent identity” of the key characters. The purpose of the analysis is to show the relationship between an ambiguous identity in a person and the idea of tolerance and catholicity that is needed by people of the minority. If we fail to recognize the fact that people of different religion, sexual orientation, and political agenda are all ordinary human with common ground on other respects, reading/watching Angels would be like a perfunctory trip that is none of our business. Thus, on the basis of close reading and textual analysis, the research demonstrates how Kushner probes into the identity struggling characters, and expresses his appeals for tolerance and compassion to the gay community. The following is the format of the research: besides the Introduction and Conclusion, four chapters establish the main body of the paper, successively discussing the ambivalent identity of characters in this order: Prior, Roy, Louis and Joe, Hannah. They each addresses how the ambivalence of the character is caused and presented, and then analyses their connection with the theme of tolerance. Lastly, the research findings will be summarized in Conclusion, which demonstrates Kushner’s hopes for tolerance in America. Chapter One The Ambivalent Identity of Prior Walter Prior Walter is considered by many critics such as Kimberly Lynn Dyer to be the hero of the play, but before the Angel comes to him, Prior is just a heartbroken gay man who is dying from AIDS. Kushner portrays the Reagan era as “dysfunctional” (Dyer V), and Prior’s condition can be an epitome of that. Abandoned by Louis, angry in pain, hallucinating in his own room, talking to the ghosts, these images of darkness and depression all contradict his heroic figure. Therefore, the largest ambivalence in Prior’s character is his imminent mortality and his identity as “America’s hero” (Dyer V), i.e. his weakness and his strength. Prior Walter’s homosexuality is, as he brandishes himself, “stereotypical” (Part Two, Act IV, Scene 4). He speaks in a femininely refined manner, taking part of his soliloquy for example: “One wants to move through life with elegance and grace, blossoming infrequently but with exquisite taste, and perfect timing, like a rare bloom, a zebra orchid…” (Part One, Act I, Scene 7). Also, he wears make-up to deal with “emotional emergency” (Part One, Act I, Scene 7). He curses all the time, and he carries HIV. Facing AIDS and death, Prior frequently shows his frustration and vulnerability. After his fantastical encounter with Harper, he looks in the mirror and says, “I don't think there's any uninfected part of me. My heart is pumping polluted blood. I feel dirty,” and at the end of the scene he morns, “Poor me. Poor poor me. Why me? Why poor poor me?” (Part One, Act I, Scene 7). In the hospital with Belize, he suddenly bursts out desperately, “I don't remember, I don't give a fuck. I want Louis. I want my fucking boyfriend, where the fuck is he? I'm dying, I'm dying, where's Louis?” (Part One, Act II, Scene 5). Even after the angel tells him that he is the Prophet (Part Two, Act II, Scene 2), he still shows a lot of despair. After his friend’s funeral, refuting Belize’s consolation, he complains with an especially pessimistic tone: “A great queen; big fucking deal. That ludicrous spectacle in there, just a parody of the funeral of someone who really counted. We don't; faggots; we're just a bad dream the real world is having, and the real world's waking up. And he's dead” (Part Two, Act II, Scene 1). Apparently, the discrimination from the rest of the “real world” and the trauma from both AIDS and Louis’s abandonment have taken some of his faith away. And then, there is another side of Prior, one with courage and vision. Contrary to what he said earlier about his “polluted blood,” when the Angel approaches and he gets scared, he goes through a little ritual to stay calm: “no, no fear, find the anger, find the… anger, my blood is clean, my brain is fine, I can handle pressure, I am a gay man and I am used to pressure, to trouble, I am tough and strong” (Part One, Act III, Scene 7), which we can assume is a mechanism he has used before. After this, his role as a prophetic hero begins. Here, before reading into his heroic figure, we can still see weakness even when Prior is accepting the role, as he still shows ambivalence. On the one hand, he cannot be sure if his encounter with the supernatural actually happened. On the other hand, he somehow believes the whole experience and meditates on it. When he discusses this with Belize, he says “I’m almost completely sure of it” (Part Two, Act II, Scene 1). Then when Belize questions the truthfulness of the story, he gets into a debate with him: PRIOR (Overlapping): I hardly think it's appropriate for you to get offended, I didn't invent this shit it was visited on me… BELIZE (Overlapping on "offended"): But it is offensive or at least monumentally confused and it's not… visited, Prior. By who? It is from you, what else is it? PRIOR: Something else. BELIZE: That's crazy. PRIOR: Then I'm crazy. BELIZE: No, you're… PRIOR: Then it was an angel. BELIZE: It was not an... PRIOR: Then I'm crazy. The whole world is, why not me? (Part Two, Act II, Scene 2) The ambivalence as to whether to accept the prophetic role indicates again the vulnerable and despair side of Prior, having lost faith in reality. However, it is because of the despair that Prior is willing to believe his fantasia: “Maybe I am a prophet. Not just me, all of us who are dying now” (Part Two, Act II, Scene 2). Finally, albeit still in ambivalence, Prior decides to deal with the Angel no matter she is real or not. When Hannah fearfully refuses to deal with the angel in the hospital, saying “I don't, I don't, this is a dream it's a dream it's a...,” Prior responses quite comically: “I don't think that's really the point right at this particular moment” (Part Two, Act V, Scene 1). So he chooses to confront the angel, going with his guts and rejecting the vision. The most heroic part is his short appearance in Heaven, returning the tome, shaking his fate, giving instructions to the Angels, and asking for life (Part Two, Act V, Scene 5). Not only because in this scene Prior’s speech shows certainty, clarity and determination (On the notion of “stop moving” he refutes, “It's animate, it's what living things do,” touching the notion of progress that Kushner tries to convey; referring to God, he tells them to “sue the bastard,” as if talking about Louis, which reminds us again of the uncertainty of the truthfulness of his Prophet identity; then, though he is told by the Angels that AIDS cannot be stopped, he demands, “Bless me anyway. I want more life. I can't help myself.”), but also because he tosses off the Angel’s manipulation, as the Angel here represents Reagan Era values. I hereby allude to Dyer’s argument that the Angel in Angels is linked to human institutions, capitalism, self-interest, and Celestial Apparatchiks (Dyer 8). Therefore, there is a sense of survival and triumph as Prior goes back to a world without the Angels, though still with AIDS, still with his socially and politically prejudiced homosexuality, and of course still with his vulnerability. The victory belongs to his stereotypical gayness, feminine, weak, but increasingly stronger. Dyer also quotes John Paul Middlesworth, that Kushner “finds the epic mode irresistible and creates in Prior Walter a hero, making the character a spokesperson for his community during historical crisis, the emergence of AIDS as an epidemic” (qtd. in Dyer 11). Therefore, Prior as a member of the vulnerable and dying stands out to be optimistic and vigorous, as he talks to the audience with warm hope at the end of the epilogue, “We won't die secret deaths anymore. The world only spins forward. We will be citizens. The time has come. Bye now. You are fabulous creatures, each and every one. And I bless you: More Life. The Great Work Begins” (Epilogue). To sum up, this chapter discusses Prior Walter’s ambivalent identity between a dying gay with AIDS and a hero. By making Prior stand up as a representative of the weak and dying and of the disparaged, Kushner expresses his view that strength, integrity and goodness can be found in gayness, which deserves some respect and tolerance in the world. Chapter Two The Ambivalent Identity of Roy Cohn Kushner’s Roy Cohn is known to be enjoyed by critics (Hilton 20). According to Melissa Hilton, Richard Hornby says the character Cohn is a “Brutal, manic, lying manipulator, a Richard III without a hump” (qtd. in Hilton 21). Don Shewey observes, “[T]he stage is dominated by Roy Cohn, a tour de force role: Flagrantly unpleasant, shrewdly seductive, the Devil incarnate” (qtd. in Hilton 21). In this chapter, the thesis will show that the generally acknowledged viciousness of Roy Cohn derives from his ambivalent identity, and then discuss the ambivalent attitude that Kushner has toward him. Social-Darwinism and self-interest is the center of Roy Cohn’s philosophy. On life he pontificates, “I see the universe, Joe, as a kind of sandstorm in outer space with winds of mega-hurricane velocity, but instead of grains of sand it's shards and splinters of glass” (Part One, Act I, Scene 2). He also teaches Joe Pitt: Life is full of horror; nobody escapes, nobody; save yourself. Whatever pulls on you, whatever needs from you, threatens you. Don't be afraid; people are so afraid; don't be afraid to live in the raw wind, naked, alone. . . . Learn at least this: What you are capable of. Let nothing stand in your way. (Part One, Act II, Scene 4) Indeed, in Roy Cohn’s life, nothing apart from death could stand in his way. On the basis of Italian scholar Umberto Eco’s outline of features of fascism, Hilton even argues that Kushner’s Roy Cohn is a categorical fascist (24). Indeed, many of Roy’s talks brazenly advocate contempt to the weak and the dissident and embraces power at all cost, which is what, as Prior and Kushner consider, foments injustice and endangers the country. One of the examples is when he brags about his lawyering masterpiece of securing Ethel Rosenberg’s death: Why? Because I fucking hate traitors. Because I fucking hate communists. Was it legal? Fuck legal. Am I a nice man? Fuck nice. They say terrible things about me in the Nation. Fuck the Nation. You want to be Nice, or you want to be Effective? Make the law, or subject to it. (Part One, Act III, Scene 5) However, Roy’s malignant attitude contradicts his own identity. Before he is a Reaganite Republican, he is a Jewish homosexual. But he belittles people from both categories. In reality, Roy Cohn was Joe McCarthy’s “vicious boy-henchman, expert in publicly humiliating and smearing alleged communists and homosexuals (nearly all of them Jewish)” (qtd. in Hilton 19). He is the alienator, traitor even, to his own group. In Angels we can find congruent statements. “But the thing about the American Negro is, he never went Communist. Loser Jews did” (Part Two, Act I, Scene 5), as if he is racist to his own race. Most importantly, Cohn equates homosexuality with weakness, and steers clear with that identity, as he instructs his doctor not to mistake him as a homosexual in this scene: ROY: Homosexuals are not men who sleep with other men. Homosexuals are men who in fifteen years of trying cannot get a pissant antidiscrimination bill through City Council. Homosexuals are men who know nobody and who nobody knows. Who have zero clout. Does this sound like me, Henry? HENRY: No. ROY: No. I have clout. A lot. I can pick up this phone, punch fifteen numbers, and you know who will be on the other end in under five minutes, Henry? HENRY: The President. ROY: Even better, Henry. His wife. HENRY: I'm impressed. ROY: I don't want you to be impressed. I want you to understand. This is not sophistry. And this is not hypocrisy. This is reality…Roy Cohn is not a homosexual. Roy Cohn is a heterosexual man, Henry, who fucks around with guys. HENRY: OK, Roy. ROY: And what is my diagnosis, Henry? HENRY: YOU have AIDS, Roy. ROY: NO, Henry, no. AIDS is what homosexuals have. I have liver cancer. (Part One, Act I, Scene 9) Contrary to Roy’s own excuses, this is obviously sophistry, and the fact that he can blatantly twist the obvious shows how hypocritical and cowardly he is about who he really is. The ambivalence of Roy Cohn sets off his image as a satanic villain. Then it is naturally acceptable that the honest Prior could live while the savage Roy dies. He is an activist of the right-wing intolerance, but he ends up a victim of the Right (Hilton 41). However, although Kushner’s Roy is meant to be so bad and to be hated so much, Kushner deliberately creates space for the audience/reader to feel compassionate for Roy. Approaching his demise, physically, Roy suffers from frequent and painful spasms, but what he cares more about is his reputation of prowess, his legacy. “After I die they'll say it was for the money and the headlines. But it was never the money: It's the moxie that counts. I never wavered. You: remember” (Part Two, Act IV, Scene 1), he tells Joe. So it hurts him tremendously that he is disbarred. So at last he takes a cheap stunt of faking death, trying to win for the last time: “I fooled you Ethel, I knew who you were all along, I can't believe you fell for that ma stuff, I just wanted to see if I could finally, finally make Ethel Rosenberg sing! I WIN” (Part Two, Act IV, Scene 9). But under such circumstances, the cheaper his stunt is, the more deplorable he gets. As Hilton observes, “Despite the despicable and hypocritical aspects of Kushner’s Cohn, the play generates sympathy for the man Cohn, as he is dying of AIDS. The audience’s ambivalent feelings toward Cohn – disgust mixed with compassion – generate some of the most powerful tension in Angels” (Hilton, 21). This kind of ambivalence is actually portrayed in the play, as Belize tries to give friendly medical advices to Roy: ROY: YOU hate me. BELIZE: Yes. ROY: Why are you telling me this? BELIZE: I wish I knew. ROY (Very nasty): You're a butterfingers spook faggot nurse. I think ... you have little reason to want to help me. BELIZE: Consider it solidarity. One faggot to another. (Part Two, Act I, Scene 5) In this way, Cohn’s “actions repulse us but” his “suffering moves us” (Hilton, 21). Therefore, the idea of compassion and tolerance is embedded. To sum up, this chapter discusses the ambivalence of Roy Cohn. He is Jewish but he treats Jews as a group of enemies. He is gay but he treats gay as weak grass roots of the society. Ostensibly, he sticks to a solid way of life, but actually, he turns his back on himself and the people like him. Kushner perfectly portrays the ambivalent and ironic aspect of his character, but generates compassion for his death. In my opinion, any death from AIDS is worth grievance to Kushner, and that is a message he wants to send in order to get people’s attention on the issue of AIDS, and encourage tolerance. He has succeeded in this regard. Chapter Three The Ambivalent Identity of Louis and Joe The experience of Louis parallels with that of Joe Pitt, as they both abandon someone they have responsibilities for, and somehow their stories also intersect with each other by becoming lovers. Louis’s ambivalence is explicit in the play on religious, political and moral respects. To begin with, morally, he is troubled by the contradiction between his need for love and his fear for death and loss. From the beginning, he reveals to Prior after the service for his grandmother that he had abandoned her for a decade, “I never visited. She looked too much like my mother” (Part One, Act I, Scene 4). Later after the funeral he confesses to his Rabbi that he cannot “incorporate sickness into his sense of how things are supposed to go,” and “vomit… and sores and disease… really frighten him” (Part One, Act I, Scene 5). He loves Prior very much, but till the end he still fails in loving him. I really failed you. He explains to Prior, “Failing in love isn't the same as not loving. It doesn't let you off the hook, it doesn't mean ... you're free to not love” (Part Two, Act V, Scene8). In addition, Louis’s religious, political and moral concerns also conflict with each other. For example, he thinks his passion for the law and for politics cannot be fulfilled because of his Jewish identity: Jews don't have any clear textual guide to the afterlife; even that it exists. I don't think much about it. I see it as a perpetual rainy Thursday afternoon in March. Dead leaves…Well for us it's not the verdict that counts, it's the act of judgment. That's why I could never be a lawyer. In court all that matters is the verdict. (Part One, Act I, Scene 8) Also, as he attempts to seek moral relief from his religion, his Rabbi’s response enfeebles his Jewish identity: “RABBI ISIDOR CHEMELWITZ: You want to confess, better you should find a priest. LOUIS: But I'm not a Catholic, I'm a Jew. RABBI ISIDOR CHEMELWITZ: Worse luck for you, bubbulah. Catholics believe in forgiveness. Jews believe in Guilt.” (Part One, Act I, Scene5) In the meanwhile, politically, Louis’s left-wing liberal view of politics starts to unveil in his conversation with Belize, who describes them as “yaddadda yaddadda blah blah blah” (Part One, Act III, Scene 2). What complicates things is the fact that he admits of being racist, which contradicts a liberal thinking, to which Belize comments, “Oh I really hate that! It's no fun picking on you Louis; you're so guilty” (Part One, Act III, Scene 2). But the most ambivalent part of Louis comes with his affair with Joe Pitt. His guilt and love for Prior, who needs him too, makes him extremely lonely, and yet his solution is to find companionship from Joe, whose Reaganite Republican and Mormon background cannot be any more incompatible with his own ideal. He cannot get around the question of “how can a fundamentalist theocratic religion function participatorily in a pluralist secular democracy?” (Part Two, Act III, Scene 3). He and Joe can never find common ground on Reagan. But as he confesses, “This is interesting. I'm losing myself in an ideological leather bar. The more appalling I find your politics the more I want to hump you” (Part Two, Act III, Scene 4). The case that Kushner presents here is a conflict between human nature and political ideal. It makes Louis very complex and hard to define, and the harder it gets for us to define this person, the more possibilities and ideas he embraces, which adheres to the theme of “liberal pluralism” (Savran 219), a calling for tolerance. Joe Pitt is also very unsure of his choices, his belief, and his future. His ambivalence is not like Louis’s, only between nature and his political outlook. His good nature – austerity, ethicality, etc. – is largely shaped by his Mormon belief, which is also the source of his right wing conservatism. However, since politics is not a church of dignity but an arena of power that requires indecency, as Roy Cohn teaches him, he cannot find a way to fulfill both his religious and political ambition. This can be complex enough, although it must be Joe’s wishful thinking that his predicament stays binary, but he has a third identity – he is a closeted homosexual who has a wife. Thus, his ambivalence proliferates. His gayness contradicts his religion, since the Mormon Church “don’t believe in homosexuals” (Part One, Act I, Scene 7). His gayness also contradicts his partisanship, because gays are not equally treated by the right-wing agenda. He is obligated two-fold to hate gays, therefore to hate himself, and a part of him has been doing it for years. He tells Harper “I pray for God to crush me, break me up into little pieces and start all over again” (Part One, Act II, Scene 2). And then he confesses to her, “I try to tighten my heart into a knot, a snarl, I try to learn to live dead, just numb, but then I see someone I want, and it's like a nail, like a hot spike right through my chest, and I know I'm losing” (Part One, Act II, Scene 9). The misery caused by decades of self-denial and the frailty by lengthily desired happiness and freedom, these are some powerful emotions to be exposed in front of the audience. This is a crucial point where different experiences and even prejudices are exchanged and even challenged. As Joe finally decides to let go of any past bridle and stay with Louis, he is at last happy. As he tells Louis, “I keep expecting divine retribution for this, but... I'm actually happy” (Part Two, Act III, Scene 4). However bothered by the concern that his wife is abandoned and lost due to his happiness, he tries not to care about it. “What you did when you walked out on him was hard to do,” says he when he tries to convince Louis to stay with him, “the world may not understand it or approve but you did what you needed to do. And I consider you very brave” (Part Two, Act III, Scene 4). It is a line of exoneration not only needed by Louis, but also desperately needed by Joe himself, indicating that no matter how acceptable he tells himself his conducts are, deep inside, he has a sense of guilt. Sure enough, his argument that he and Louis both fundamentally want the same thing contradicts the ideological and political differences between them, and as he is confronted by Louis regarding his court decision against his conscience, their differences maximizes. He cannot get back to Louis, without a trace of anybody that can either love him or be loved by him. At this point, sexual satisfaction has to become peripheral, and the thing more important is to keep his wife who loves him. So when Harper finally decides to leave him, he implores, “I don't know what will happen to me without you. Only you. Only you love me. Out of everyone in the world. I have done things, I'm ashamed. But I have changed. I don't know how yet, but Please, please, don't leave me now” (Part Two, Act V, Scene 8). Is Joe ashamed of his sexuality again? Or does he simply say that just to keep Harper staying with him? In what way has he “changed”? Judging from his joyous and free status when he is with Louis, I’d say he can never go back to the life of self-denial. As for Joe’s ending in this story, Kushner does not specify. His future is not given any description, leaving a large space for interpretation. It may be because Kushner himself cannot be sure, as to how a decent homosexual Republican lawyer can find a right path. But the door of that discussion has certainly been opened. However, as far as I am concerned, the future of Joe Pitt is not important. What matters is what Kushner has shown us, the misery it causes by pretending to be something you are not, and doing things inconsistent with your good heart, which are both productions of the pressure from Reaganite conservatism. In conclusion, Louis and Joe are both struggling with their ambivalent identities, from which they suffer a lot. Louis’s biggest quagmire is the fear of imperfection in life, such as death and guilt, and at last it is his rather steady political principles that cause him to leave Joe, so he travels a big circle from Prior to Joe and then back to Prior. Joe’s predicament is his sexual orientation which contradicts his religion and the Republican doctrine that he approves. When the play ends, Louis loses his lover Prior but he can still hang out with him, while Joe remains alone with an unclear future. Although gayness is still a noticeable identity in the two characters, their complexity raises questions involving more than sexuality, that is Kushner’s political vision. Metaphorically, Joe’s sullen ending embodies the fact that, under gay scrutiny, the Reaganite Republicanism is numb, unjust and detrimental, incapable of welcoming and defending the needs of the minority. Chapter Four The Ambivalent Identity of Hannah Joe’s mother, Hannah, does not appear in as many scenes as Belize and Harper, but she is more fitting to the subject of ambivalence and tolerance. That is why the last chapter only discusses Hannah and forgoes the analysis of the other two characters. Our first impression of Hannah is that she is a very harsh and religious Mormon. Because there is no place for gays in Mormon Church, as Harper reveals, “In my church, we don’t believe in homosexuals” (Part One, Act I, Scene 7), when she gets her son’s phone call at three o’clock in the morning, and learns that Joe is a homosexual, she could barely process the news: HANNAH: YOU really ought to go home now to your wife. I need to go to bed. This phone call. . . . We will just forget this phone call. JOE: Mom. HANNAH: NO more talk. Tonight. This… (Suddenly very angry) Drinking is a sin! A sin! I raised you better than that. (She hangs up) (Part One, Act Two, Scene 8) As this scene shows, Hannah is not ready to accept Joe’s homosexuality. Not only that, at a time when her son is in need of support and direction, she simply flees from the topic, and even criticizes Joe’s drinking. This is a very cold reaction. However, based on people’s impression on Mormonism, it is probable that not many people would find it surprising. That is why this scene actually strengthens people’s prejudice against Mormons, who are considered rigid, harsh odd, and certainly anti-gay. When Hannah appears for the second time, she is already in New York, lost. Joe fails to show up to pick his mother up, and she is understandably angry. The conversation between her and the homeless woman reveals very little more about her, but she does express some opinion on an issue that slightly touches politics, i.e. immigration: I asked the driver was this Brooklyn, and he nodded yes but he was from one of those foreign countries where they think it's good manners to nod at everything even if you have no idea what it is you're nodding at, and in truth I think he spoke no English at all, which I think would make him ineligible for employment on public transportation. The public being English-speaking, mostly. (Part One, Act III, Scene 4) It is a comment that implies a very tenuous hostility to immigrants, plus our first impression of her, Hannah emits conservatism. It’s when Prior meets Hannah in the Mormon Visitor’s Center and later in the hospital that we see another side of her. First of all, when Prior gets very uncomfortable and asks her to call him a cab (Part Two, Act IV, Scene 4), she takes Prior to the hospital even though she does not have to come along, which, considering the attitude toward homosexuality that we assume she bears, is very generous. And she continues to surprise us. But first of all, Hannah will not discard her conservative values, and her discussion with Prior circles around religion. Prior thinks that he must be insane to have seen an Angel, but Hannah tells him the story of Mormon Prophet Joseph Smith, which is amazingly similar to Prior’s encounter. “He had great need of understanding. Our Prophet. His desire made prayer. His prayer made an angel. The angel was real. I believe that” (Part Two, Act IV, Scene 6). At this point, it is more obvious that Hannah values her religion very much. That is why it should be surprising to us that her view about homosexual is very clement, which is expressed in the scene that follows: PRIOR: I don't. And I'm sorry but it's repellent to me. So much of what you believe. HANNAH: What do I believe? PRIOR: I'm a homosexual. With AIDS. I can just imagine what you... HANNAH: No you can't. Imagine. The things in my head. You don't make assumptions about me, mister; I won't make them about you. PRIOR (A beat; he looks at her, then): Fair enough. HANNAH: My son is ... well, like you. PRIOR: Homosexual. HANNAH (A nod, then): I flew into a rage when he told me, mad as hornets. At first I assumed it was about his . . . (She shrugs) PRIOR: Homosexuality. HANNAH: But that wasn't it. Homosexuality. It just seems ... ungainly. Two men together. It isn't an appetizing notion but then, for me, men in any configuration ... well they're so lumpish and stupid. And stupidity gets me cross. PRIOR: I wish you would be more true to your demographic profile. Life is confusing enough. (Part Two, Act IV, Scene 6) Hannah clearly denies Prior’s presumption that she must be homophobic because of her Mormon beliefs. She just finds it not an appetizing notion which does not have that much of a difference from any other notion that is unappetizing, as if she were saying, “homosexuality does not offend me; it does not offend my God, only I am just a little not fond of it, the same as I am not fond of pornography.” It’s actually a very accepting attitude, because it is natural for heterosexuals to feel uncomfortable about gays being intimate, only it should not permits different social status. Hannah being so moderate on this issue, no wonder Prior feels confusing. After this, she has more progressive opinions about Prior’s vision as Prior asks her what would happen if he doesn’t want to be the Prophet: PRIOR: The prophets in the Bible, do they... ever refuse their vision? HANNAH: There's scriptural precedent, yes. PRIOR: And what does God do to them? When they do that? HANNAH: He____ Well, he feeds them to whales. (Part Two, Act IV, Scene 6) Then she tells Prior to disregard the tradition in the Bible, “An angel is just a belief, with wings and arms that can carry you. It's naught to be afraid of. If it lets you down, reject it. Seek for something new” (Part Two, Act IV, Scene 6). It is very fresh to see someone who takes her religion extremely serious to pose the idea that a belief can be changing, progressive. It is certainly not something that Roy Cohn and Ronald Reagan would want to encourage. At the end of the play, although it is unknown if Joe is living with his mother, Hannah finds herself a new family. “The couple that Prior and Louis once formed is replaced by the play's final argumentative, but communal, quartet of Prior, Louis, Belize, and Hannah” (Kruger 156). A family of three gay men and an old Mormon lady shows enormous conversion on Hannah’s part. To sum up, this chapter analyzes Hannah’s moderate attitude against her very strict belief. She is certain about her religion, but she is also ambivalent about the possibility of other explanations of the world. It is Hannah who offers a sense of catholicity and wholesomeness while she, as a Mormon, is assumed to be the last person to behave like this. Through depicting the character of Hannah, Kushner describes his wishful vision for America, in which a pious believer can respect and accept the existence of alternative religious and political views. Conclusion In the 1980s, i.e. the Reagan Era, conservatism prevailed and the voice of minority, including gays’, was ignored. It is in the same period that the storm of AIDS started to rage in America, but the issue of AIDS was also ignored by Reagan. The LGBT community suffered from two kinds of discrimination, one of their sexuality, and one of AIDS. They were ostracized and rejected by the majority. Tony Kushner’s Angels in America is one of the earliest literary works that explore on this issue. Kushner says in a reflection of this play, “People who don’t recognize common cause are going to fail politically in this country. Movements that capture the imagination of people are movements that deny racism and exclusion” (Kushner & Vorlicky 16-17). Therefore, it is essential to find bits and moments in the play which call for tolerance and illuminate on common ground, in order to understand Kushner’s political ideal. The research discovers a notion of tolerance by examining the ambivalent identities of key characters. Ambivalence is a key motif of Angels, and every character is ambivalent about different elements of their identity. Prior Walter’s ambivalence lies between his vulnerable gayness and his courageous heroism, which brings integrity to the gay community, and denounces Reaganite conservative institutionalism. Roy Cohn’s ambivalence derives from the contradiction between his innate Jewish and gay identity and his disparaging attitude towards Jews and Gays, and his demise embodies the dysfunction of the Reaganite and self-interested Republicanism. Louis Ironson and Joe Pitt are both ambivalent about many things, including love and responsibility, religious and political belief and personal happiness. They represent pluralism, which, as far as Kushner is concerned, might be the best hope for change of America’s chaotic situation (Savran 223). And Joe’s struggle with his family and his uncertain ending in the play also reflects the detriment of conservatism. Hannah Pitt is very moderate. She loves and adheres to Mormon teachings, but is also in favor of the others’ freedom and right to choose and believe in what they think is right. The advocacy of tolerance can be discerned in each one of these five cases. In this way, Kushner’s purpose of conveying a political ideal that denies racism and exclusion is fulfilled. Works Cited Dyer, Kimberly Lynn. Prior Walter as Hero: a New Mythological Paradigm in Tony Kushner’s Angels in America. Thesis, Angelo State University. Ann Arbor: ProQuest/UMI, 2006. (Publication No. AAT. 1436344.) Hilton, Melissa. The Political Ideologies of Roy Cohn and Prior Walter: Tony Kushner’s Political Vision in Angels in America: a Gay Fantasia on National Themes. Diss., Angelo State University. Ann Arbor: ProQuest/UMI, 1997. (Publication No. AAT. 1386100.) Kruger, Steven F. “Identity and Conversion in Angels in America.” Approaching the Millennium: Essays on Angels in America. Eds. Deborah R. Geis and Steven F. Kruger. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1997. 151-169. Kushner, Tony. Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes. New York: Theatre Communications Group, 1995. Kushner, Tony and Robert Vorlicky. Tony Kushner in Conversation. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1998. McCallum, Robin Lee Green. Medieval Death Iconography in the Portrayal of AIDS in Angels in America. Diss., California State University. Ann Arbor: ProQuest/UMI, 2005. (Publication No. AAT. 1430838.) Omer-Sherman, Ranen. “The Fate of the Other in Tony Kushner's Angels in America.” MELUS, Vol. 32, No. 2, Thresholds, Secrets, and Knowledge Summer 2007: 7-30. Savran, David. “Ambivalence, Utopia, and a Queer Sort of Materialism: How Angels in America Reconstructs the Nation.” Theatre Journal, Vol. 47, No. 2, Gay and Lesbian Queeries (May, 1995): 207-227. Smith, Jordan Michael. “The Literary Roots of the Gay Revolution.” Page Views. 2 February 2012. 22 May 2012 <http://www.cjr.org/page_views the_ literary_roots_of_the_gay.php?page=all>. Siegel, Lee. “Angels in America.” The New Republic. 29 December 2003. 22 May 2012 <http://www.tnr.com/article/angles-america>.

 8 ) 比想象中的强悍很多

在这个片子里得出结论:天使是正强者。

演员相当赞,整个片子都有一种很强势的力量统摄着。属于声势浩大的伦理大片。虽然关于宗教之类一直不懂,但不妨碍感受本片压倒性的气势。

 短评

太精彩了,表面上的同志片融合了很多对于美国社会政治、法律、宗教的思考,对话犀利、演技精湛,相比之下去年的平常心简直就是利用孔雀的颜值赚取眼泪的平庸作品,本片设定的年代与情节虽然没有少数群体奋起抗争的桥段,但是几个主角与人性缺陷的斗争、对生命与进步的渴求比起喊口号式的斗争好看得多。

6分钟前
  • 我是一只小小李
  • 力荐

代表上帝赏罚你们!一部精美感人的大字报。右gay这么无耻的生物,终究与善良的左gay不是一个物种!只是可惜我们不能把右gay开除gay籍了!(本片看来,右gay的身份不仅与左gay隔着壁,还一路down到女权下面去了,我寻思着右gay以后要想在白左片里出道,可必须得想办法傍个直男,最好还是个极右直男,要是能找来个特朗普,那就最完美不过了,绝对稳稳垫在PC链底层,成为永恒的加害者

7分钟前
  • G
  • 还行

這才是史詩級的同愛巨片吧~背背山算什麽~

12分钟前
  • 消失
  • 力荐

编剧是天才. 演员很出色.

16分钟前
  • Griet
  • 力荐

每个心碎,不开心的人大概都被天使或魔鬼掌控着。结尾真好,回归平静。(美人JK怎么老演可怜巴巴的小gay,先是盲人又是艾滋的。。他穿着一袭黑袍走在秋天里实在是契合!

19分钟前
  • 彌張
  • 推荐

又一部帕西诺参与的作品,演的老年同性恋还挺像样的,虽然Aids病死的样子让人觉得可气又可笑;全剧的对话很好,高质量,好几段都想找出来反复看,后来发现是剧本改编,果然还是要有真正的文学原著当后盾才好出上乘佳品。

21分钟前
  • Lucida
  • 推荐

这个阵容,这个编剧,为什么我现在才找到!!!!WHY!!!!

24分钟前
  • 萬徳褔
  • 还行

「我跟男人做爱,可是跟其它这样的男人不一样的是,我把我干的男人带到白宫,里根总统还得笑着跟我们握手。」

29分钟前
  • frank1127
  • 还行

自制了精校版:不要因为有大量宗教隐喻/象征而有负担地观看。建议第一遍先专注剧情,感受台词和表演,然后再考虑解读。演员们的表演极佳,引发了我的强烈共鸣,在海量题材类似的故事里依然大放光彩,有深度,有美感,有内涵,非常喜欢。值得影史留名的LGBT佳作

33分钟前
  • Virgil
  • 力荐

complexity。很闷很复杂,全程看字幕,改编果然很有舞台剧的感觉。“我们信心虽然我们不信上帝,但显然上帝就是我们心中对于生的渴望,对于生活的热爱,以及忍受。我们不得不面对那些痛苦,但是又怎样?即使没有上帝来照顾我们,我们也要自己来面对这一切,上帝只是我们内心的映像,那种想法

34分钟前
  • 白熊启动子
  • 推荐

身体是灵魂的花园,意识借由肉体在人间这个娱乐场玩耍体验,在灵性科学上也是这么说的。噩梦厄运像恶魔一样如影随形,总是在你不坚定的时候占据你击垮你,当这一切发生时,你能做的唯有祈祷爱,让灵魂恢复平静,让意识回归空白,顺应心声重新开始。该来的总会来,该去的也依旧回去。★★★★

38分钟前
  • 亵渎电影
  • 推荐

全是大牌,教父,梅姨,汤姑,毒妈,小叔子,水果硬糖。既严肃又搞笑,嬉笑怒骂玄幻讽刺,要忍受得了高度集中的对白以及妙语连珠的轰炸,关于艾滋、同性恋、政治、宗教。很不错的迷你剧。

42分钟前
  • LORENZO 洛伦佐
  • 力荐

1.时隔七年再看,看到半夜两点,唯一明白的是我还没完全看明白= =。2.我迫切需要一份剧本儿当基础英语精读TAT。3.一边看一边想起"虽不明但觉厉"是肿么回事。。。4.看美剧都能看到质疑自己智商的不多见吧5555。5.梅姨反串看一次帅一次

43分钟前
  • 翔如飞飞
  • 力荐

神剧啊!政治,宗教,同性恋,艾滋病,摩门教,梦境,隐喻,意象,幻觉……看演技有阿叔+梅姨+艾玛,看颜指数有贾斯汀(最后一集里好看死了!)+本+帕特里克,连大西洋帝国里那个讨厌的黑Doctor十年前都这么可爱!只是对普通人来说,剧中那些政治的、宗教的对话略显枯燥乏味了点。。。 ③

48分钟前
  • 五月微蓝
  • 推荐

他们寻觅爱,无爱的人生如行尸走肉,生不如死。可一旦寻得了爱,又失望地发现爱比死更冷。我们再也不知该如何自处。

53分钟前
  • 不良生
  • 推荐

看过的最特别的同志电影了吧,戏剧张力十足,剧本细腻之极!(《林肯》的编剧,本身就是同志)就是跟宗教和政治的结合部分,还是需要纯正美国人才能看懂啊。。。

54分钟前
  • 米粒
  • 推荐

美国的tv movie有时候绝对让人眼前一亮!”i'm not scared!! i've got aids!!"just genius !

58分钟前
  • 雨田立日
  • 推荐

显然《天使在美国》是以“Hope”之名现身在犹如坟墓的现代生活中。尽管这个清晰如真的形象是绝望与迷失者于冷战背景以及异化语境下冥想出来的幻觉,但梦境与现实的交互无疑又启示着命运的开端。像这样一部反思社会结构审视时代焦虑如此前卫又克制的重量级杰作怕是只能于千禧年降临前夕或初始才会诞生,因为在之后漫长的历史冰冻期里忧心忡忡的质疑又将凝固重建起安逸如常的享受。

1小时前
  • Muto
  • 力荐

看了2017年舞台剧《天使在美国》,再来看下这部2003年同名美剧:本剧的故事内容基本沿袭舞台剧,没有做太多的改动,不过真实化的场景特效于我而言更有代入感,整体卡司阵容也比2017年舞台剧更中意一些。本剧入选了2003年美国电影学会奖的十佳剧集,在第61届金球奖上也包揽了所有限定剧/电视电影类的奖项,在第56届艾美奖亦获得最佳迷你剧/电视电影以及最佳迷你剧/电视电影最佳导演、编剧、男主、女主、男配、女配等奖项。

1小时前
  • Panda的影音
  • 推荐

We won't die secret deaths anymore. The world only spins forward. We will be citizens. The time has come. https://movie.douban.com/review/7372992/ https://movie.douban.com/review/7384586/

1小时前
  • Mumu
  • 力荐

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