Skip to main content

Michelle Williams is still not sure Brokeback Mountain should have lost Best Picture

Michelle Williams in Brokeback Mountain
Focus Features

20 years after it lost Best Picture at the Oscars to Crash, Michelle Williams still thinks that Brokeback Mountain was wronged by the Academy. In an interview on Watch What Happens Live?, Williams discussed the movie’s famous Best Picture loss and even took a dig at the movie that beat it.

“I mean, what was Crash?” Williams said during the interview.

Recommended Videos

“People were so open about it,” the five-time Oscar nominee added. “I just remember doing the junket. You don’t really get an opportunity to see a lot of grown men cry. That was the moment that I think that we all knew that it was going to be special.”

Should Brokeback Mountain Have Won The Best Picture Oscar? | WWHL

The film, which starred Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal as a pair of cowhands who started a 20-year love affair while herding sheep together in Montana, earned widespread acclaim at the time of its release. At the time, Brokeback‘s Best Picture loss was considered to be, at least partially, a response to the movie’s overtly gay story at a time when Hollywood was still hesitant to embrace the LGBTQ+ community.

Ang Lee, the film’s director, told Indiewire that the movie’s gay themes meant that winning the top prize was going to be impossible, at least at the time. “Back then, [Brokeback Mountain] had a ceiling,” he told IndieWire. “We got a lot of support — up to that much. It has that feeling. I wasn’t holding a grudge or anything. It’s just how they were.”

Williams earned her first Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress in the film, playing Ledger’s wife Alma. Although it didn’t earn the top prize, Lee was honored for his direction of the movie.

Joe Allen
Joe Allen is a freelance writer at Digital Trends, where he covers Movies and TV. He frequently writes streaming…
Black Mirror season 7 episodes, ranked
A man and woman stand in a dark hallway in the Eulogy episode of Black Mirror.

Black Mirror is devastatingly disturbing yet so philosophically thought-provoking. The anthology series, which first premiered on Channel 4 in 2011, after which it moved to Netflix from season three onward, has solidified its creator, Charlie Brooker, as somewhat of a creative genius. It took four years for fans to get a sixth season and almost another two years for season seven, which is finally here. But it was worth the wait.

There are six episodes in total, many of which take us back to the original luster of the show. Black Mirror has always been about technology gone too far and the implications of inevitably disastrous, futuristic scenarios. While the show diverged in later seasons to feature more horror and less psychology, season seven is back in full form. The episodes range from cyberpunk to psychological thriller to heartbreakingly emotional tales. The cast is a mixed bag of both knowns and unknowns. Plus, this season features the first-ever sequel episode. Every episode is solid, Black Mirror at its finest. But some are especially enthralling.

Read more
3 great BritBox shows you should watch in April 2025
Martin Freeman in The Respnder

Amidst all the streaming behemoths that have come to dominate the landscape in the past 15 years, there are also smaller, more boutique offerings that are filled with interesting shows and movies worth watching. If you're interested in sampling some shows from across the pond, then BritBox is the best place to start.
The streamer is filled with British series that seem designed to remind you that they do things differently in the U.K., especially on TV. We've pulled out three great shows, all available on the streaming service that you might never have heard of. Regardless of what you're looking for, you'll hopefully find something interesting here.

Need more recommendations? Then check out the best new movies to stream this week, as well as the best shows on Netflix, best shows on Hulu, best shows on Amazon Prime Video, and best shows on Disney+.
Three Little Birds (2023)
Three Little Birds I BritBox Original I Trailer
A specific look at the immigrant experience in America, Three Little Birds tells the story of three Jamaican women who immigrated to the U.K. in the 1950s and 1960s. The series is based on real stories about the immigrant experience and examines the discrimination these women felt and the community they created in their new home.
Few shows are so careful about depicting the realities of this particular corner of British life, and Three Little Birds is an important reminder of the way immigration has shaped the culture of Britain that we know today.
You can watch Three Little Birds on BritBox.
The Responder (2022-)
The Responder | Trailer – BBC
There are tons of police shows on BritBox, but The Responder sits on more unique ground. The series tells the story of urgent responder Chris Carson (Martin Freeman) as he works a series of night shifts in Liverpool.
As he attempts to save lives amid a variety of high-stress situations, Chris is also dealing with his own deteriorating mental health and the corruption that threatens to consume all the good he's done. Featuring an incredible performance from Freeman and the kind of relentless pace that only the best medical shows are able to maintain, The Responder is well worth your time.
You can watch The Responder on BritBox. 
Oliver Twist (2007)
Oliver Twist 2007 TV Mini-Series | Sarah Lancashire, Timothy Spall | Review

Read more
3 underrated shows on Netflix you need to watch in April 2025
Colman Domingo in The Madness.

This month on Netflix, Charlie Brooker returns for more social nightmares with Black Mirror season 7. For the first time in series history, Brooker did a sequel, USS Callister: Into Infinity, the follow-up to the Emmy-winning USS Callister from season 4. The other notable show coming in April is You season 5, the final run for serial killer Joe Goldberg.

While Black Mirror and You will dominate the most popular list for all of April, more shows are ready to be watched at the click of a button. Some underrated offerings include a stand-up comedy special, a conspiracy thriller, and a children's TV show.

Read more