Feature Review:
Breakfast on Pluto
Written by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- Irish director Neil
Jordan confounded Hollywood with his 1992 Oscar-winning "The
Crying Game." He's gender-bending again in this story of a
small-town lad who becomes a transvestite.
Set in Treelin, Ireland in the 1970s, it's the tender, episodic tale
of Patrick Braden (Cillian Murphy), who was abandoned as a baby, the
scandalously illicit, out-of-wedlock child of the parish priest (Liam
Neeson) and his pretty, blonde housekeeper. Acutely aware that he's
different, Patrick assumes the eccentric identity of a free-spirited
woman called "Kitten" and travels to London, determined to
find his mother, the "Phantom Lady." All he knows is that
resembles actress Mitzi Gaynor. Although he's beaten by the IRA and
the victim of a nightclub bombing, he never loses his light-hearted,
coquettish yet defiantly indefatigable spirit.
Based on Patrick McCabe's novel, this meandering, visually
intoxicating comic fable, photographed by Declan Quinn, evokes
memories of the naive, wistful innocence of both "Forrest Gump"
and "Big Fish." But what's most amazing is 29 year-old
Cillian Murphy's incredible versatility! He's the same actor who
played the villain in "Red Eye" and Crane/The Scarecrow in
"Batman Begins." Murphy astonishes with his chameleon skill,
his bravura style and his knockout performance. He has strong support
from Liam Neeson, Brendan Gleeson as an angry amusement park employee,
Stephen Rea as a kindly magician and Roxy Music's Bryan Ferry as a
treacherous john whom Kitten repulses by spraying him with Chanel No.
5. On the Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to 10, "Breakfast on
Pluto" is a picaresque 7. The pop soundtrack is sensational and
the whimsical title comes from a 1969 hit song in Britain.
Rated: 7/10
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