Movie |
Sexuality | Homophobia
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7.1/10
IMDbOutstanding Artistic Achievement | 2002 | Moisés Kaufman
2002 | Moisés Kaufman
Minute or Longer Network Category | 2002 | Moisés Kaufman
Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series Miniseries or a Motion Picture Made for Television | 2003 | Terry Kinney
Best Actress in a Supporting Role in a Miniseries or a Motion Picture Made for Television | 2003 | Frances Sternhagen
Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture or Miniseries | 2002 | Amy Madigan
Best Writing of a Motion Picture or Miniseries | 2002 | Moisés Kaufman
Best Direction of a Motion Picture or Miniseries | 2002 | Moisés Kaufman
Outstanding Writing for a Miniseries Movie or a Dramatic Special | 2002 | Moisés Kaufman
Outstanding Made for Television Movie | 2002 | Ted Hope
Outstanding Casting for a Miniseries Movie or a Special | 2002 | Ann Goulder
Outstanding Directing for a Miniseries Movie or a Dramatic Special | 2002 | Moisés Kaufman
Outstanding Producer of LongForm Television | 2003 | Ted Hope
2002 | Moisés Kaufman
The film was to make its HBO debut on March 16, 2002, but was pushed forward a week when NBC scheduled The Matthew Shepard Story (2002) for the same day.
Members of the Tectonic company who originally conducted the interviews in Laramie are featured in the movie.
In one scene, Rebecca Hillicker (Camryn Manheim) is directing a rehearsal of a play that Moisés Kaufman (Nestor Carbonell) says he "never gets tired of" (and Hillicker responds, "Yeah, well, try directing it fifty times."). The play is "Our Town" by Thornton Wilder, which won the 1938 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and has been a staple of community, college, and high school theaters ever since. Like "The Laramie Project", "Our Town" is a play about a typical American small town and the impact on that town's citizens of the death of a beloved young person.
The Jedadiah Schultz character (played by Jeremy Davies) talks about winning a competition by performing a scene from the play "Angels in America" by Tony Kushner. Kathleen Chalfant, another member of the "Laramie Project" cast, played Hannah Porter Pitt, Ethel Rosenberg, and other roles in the original Broadway production of "Angels in America".
Michael Emerson, who plays a homophobic reverend here, had also starred in a previous Moisés Kaufman production, the off-Broadway play "Gross Indecency: The Trials of Oscar Wilde." In that, Emerson played the gay Irish playwright Oscar Wilde, who was prosecuted and imprisoned for his homosexuality (which was an illegal offense in England until the late 1960s).
"Dennis Shepard: My son, Matthew, did not look like a winner. He was rather uncoordinated and wore braces from the age of 13 until the day he died. However in his all-too-brief life, he proved that he was a winner. On October 6th 1998, he tried to show the world he could win again. On October 12th 1998, my first born son, and my hero, lost. On October 12th 1998, my first born son, and my hero, died. 50 days before his 22nd birthday. I keep wondering the same thing that I did when I first saw him in the hospital. What would he have become? How could he have changed his piece of the world to make it better? Matt officially died in a hospital in Fort Collins, Colorado. He actually died on the outskirts of Laramie, tied to a fence. You, Mr. McKinney, with your friend Mr. Henderson, left him there, by himself. But he was not alone. There were his lifelong friends with him, friends that he had grown up with. You're probably wondering who these friends were. First he had the beautiful night sky and the same stars and moon we used to see through a telescope. Then he had the daylight and the sun to shine on him. And through it all, he was breathing in the scent of the pine trees from the snowy range. He heard the wind, the ever present Wyoming wind for the last time. He had one more friend with him. He had God. And I feel better, knowing he wasn't alone. Matt's beating, hospitalization, and funeral focused worldwide attention on hate. Good is coming out of evil. People have said, 'Enough is enough.' I miss my son, but I am proud to be able to say that he was my son. Judy has been quoted as being against the death penalty. It has been stated that Matt was against the death penalty. Both of these statements are false. I, too, believe in the death penalty. I would like nothing better than to see you die, Mr. McKinney. However, this is the time to begin the healing process, to show mercy to someone who refused to show any mercy. Mr. McKinney, I am going to grant you life, as hard as it is to do so, because of Matthew. Everytime you celebrate Christmas, a birthday, the 4th of July, remember that Matt isn't. Everytime that you wake up in your prison cell, remember you had the opportunity and the ability to stop your actions that night. You robbed me of something very precious and I will never forgive you for that. Mr. McKinney, I give you life in the memory of someone who no longer lives. May you have a long life. And may you thank Matthew everyday for it."
"Stephen Belber: 'Live and let live' is, at best, a load of crap. It basically boils down to: 'If I don't tell you I'm a fag, you won't beat the crap out of me'. What kind of philosophy is that?"