Set after the children are born, the scene finds Alma in a laundromat late at night. A kind woman (a deleted character named Mrs. Grimaldi) asks if her husband works late. Alma, exhausted, breaks down. She doesn’t mention Jack by name, but she says, “He goes fishin’ a lot. He don’t like fish.” She then reveals she found a postcard with a Wyoming postmark and a single line: “Friend, see you in a couple weeks.”
For every fan who has watched the film a dozen times, the deleted scenes are not errors. They are souvenirs. A glimpse of Jack laughing on a bus bench. Alma crying over a washing machine. A young Ennis recoiling from a gentle kiss. They remind us that Brokeback Mountain is not just a story about a place we can’t return to—it’s a film we can never fully see. And maybe, that’s the point.
This article digs deep into the history, the content, and the emotional impact of the deleted scenes from Brokeback Mountain . Perhaps the most famous of all the deleted material is the extended version of the tent scene. In the theatrical cut, the sequence is abrupt and violent. Drunk on cheap whiskey and frozen by the Wyoming night, Jack pulls Ennis’s hand onto his own erection. Ennis reacts with a punch, followed by a frantic, desperate release of pent-up desire.
According to screenwriter Diana Ossana, this version was cut because it was “too soft.” Ang Lee worried it might confuse audiences expecting homophobic violence. Yet Heath Ledger reportedly preferred the extended cut, feeling it better illustrated Ennis’s internal war between wanting tenderness and fearing it. To this day, this is the scene fans most desperately want restored. In the final film, the two years following the first summer on Brokeback are conveyed through a montage of postcards and the infamous reunion kiss. A deleted scene, however, bridged that gap. It took place a few months after they left the mountain, before either had married.
The deleted version, which exists only in low-quality dubs from early screeners, is radically different. It is slower, more hesitant, and arguably more romantic. Instead of the aggressive physical lunge, the scene features a long, agonizing beat where Jack simply whispers, “It’s okay.” Ennis, shivering, asks, “What’s okay?” Jack leans over and kisses him—softly, chastely—on the lips. Ennis freezes like a deer in headlights before the dam breaks.