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Beautiful
Stranger
By Michael Koresky
Breakfast on Pluto Dir. Neil Jordan, U.K./Ireland,
Sony Pictures Classics Two
things you must try to forget while watching Neil
Jordan’s Breakfast on Pluto: Candide
and The Crying Game. Both might bubble
up in the forefront of your consciousness as easy
thematic signposts, but push them into your peripheries.
While the former reference point exists as a simplistic
critical touchstone for those watching Breakfast
on Pluto with an analytical or strictly philosophical
eye rather than an emotional investment, the latter,
Jordan’s masterful love story and one of the Nineties’
most complex mainstream films, only relates to
the director’s latest in a purely superficial
manner. Incidentally, neither film is about drag
queens. In one recent, particularly knuckleheaded
online Q&A, the interviewer opened her interrogation
of Jordan by asking: “Could you talk about your
interest in transvestites?” Jordan became understandably
put off and seemed to sit out the rest of the
interview with what came across in the text as
thorough disinterest. Like the term “drag,” “transvestite”
seems insubstantial in the face of such profound
psychological human portraiture. But more importantly,
The Crying Game, so rich in dualities,
so incisive about the alliance of political and
sexual urges, is a film about what is hidden,
what’s bubbling below surfaces, while Breakfast
on Pluto is a film in which all is revealed,
bald-faced, unashamed, done up in buttons and
bows. Breakfast on Pluto, a gleaming smile
of hope in a rancid world made up of all different
shades of intolerance, is the gloriously open-hearted
wish fulfillment of The Crying Game—the
difference between the two films is as plain as
night and day.
Surely, the film is to be taken seriously (“Serious,
serious, serious” is its wide-eyed protagonist’s
oft retort)—its attempts to introduce levity to
where we might not normally see it are downright
Dickensian. Therefore, many might distrust Jordan’s
rainbow-bright fantasia as insincere or forced
or even (gulp!) a distant cousin to Forrest
Gump—yet while Pluto’s Patrick “Kitten”
Braden may traverse decades of tumultuous politics
and violence, it is not with ease, it is not untouched,
and he is infinitely more proactive. Zemeckis’s
slow-witted protagonist was preternaturally deluded;
Kitten may remain an optimist, but it’s more her
pragmatism that gets her from one epochal event
to the next. Born in Tyreelin, Ireland, in 1958,
Patrick is left at the doorstep of the town’s
priest, Father Bernard (a warm, conflicted Liam
Neeson), in a basket. After being raised by the
squawking, abusive Ma Braden, a local pub owner,
the child discovers the appeal of women’s clothing
at an early age. In a bold move, Cillian Murphy,
introduced as the teenage Patrick applying eyeliner,
never appears “as a boy” within the film. In this
case, while Murphy’s identity is always concealed,
Kitten’s is completely revealed, and always without
pretense. And in a performance that validates
the young actor’s constant accruing of accolades,
Murphy remains so completely in character from
first frame to last that the rhythm of Jordan’s
entire film grows reliant on him. With sing-song
cadences that coyly refract everything she comes
in contact with and popping blue eyes somewhat
betrayed by their eminently wise and often hollow
sunkenness, Murphy’s Kitten, a self-proclaimed
“svelte gamine,” is as glorious, fabulous, and,
yes, practical as she would like us to believe.
With its 36 chaptered, full-throttle narrative,
Breakfast on Pluto’s closest precedent
in the Jordan canon could only be his 1998 masterpiece
The Butcher Boy, which like this film was
based on a novel by Patrick McCabe. That disconcerting,
wildly vivid burlesque horror show couldn’t be
further in tone from Pluto, yet it also
couldn’t be closer in perspective: Butcher
Boy’s Francie Brady, like Patrick “Kitten”
Braden, never doubted his intentions, stayed completely
within his own mindset without compromise. Yet
Francie was too abused by a thankless system which
kept him on the fringes, and his social realities
turned him, ever so gradually, into a monster.
Kitten likewise narrates her own story, and the
fabulist picaresque of her tale is a breathless
whiz-bang of discrete episodes, yet this time
around, society, surprisingly, does not close
its doors on our protagonist. “The poor boy never
had a chance,” lament the townsfolk in The
Butcher Boy. Thankfully, there is benevolence
surrounding Kitten, and more often than not, he
is met in his travels, en route to London to track
down his long-lost mother, by other fringe-dwellers
too distracted by their own eccentricities to
notice Patrick’s abnormalities. Though danger
lurks (Bryan Ferry’s elegantly creepy, bolo tie-wearing
john being the most notable), Kitten manages to
retain the ardor of her initially joyous narration
through meetings with Brendan Gleeson’s riotously
belligerent children’s playground performer, Gavin
Friday’s deceptively romantic IRA goon-cum-Native
American-obsessed rocker, and especially Jordan
stalwart Stephen Rea’s dandy-ish, compassionate,
and more than a tad exploitative stage magician
Bertie.
While sticks in the mud will decry the constant
use of pop songs to underscore Kitten’s journey,
Jordan, a master in picking the perfect tune to
both define and lend to irony to any given moment
(The Crying Game’s “Stand by Your Man”
both poked fun at and crystallized its film’s
themes, The Butcher Boy’s “Where Are You?”
granted emotional heft and grounding nostalgia
to Francie Brady’s sign-off), has perhaps found
his most pop-ready protagonist yet. As much as
anything else, Breakfast on Pluto is about
the serene melancholia of Michel Legrand’s “The
Windmills of Your Mind,” the toe-tapping wanderlust
of Middle of the Road’s “Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep,”
the pragmatic ingratiation of Nilsson’s “Me and
My Arrow”—oftentimes, the songs will bounce and
meld into one another and resonate long past their
visual accompaniment.
This is not to downplay the film’s dramatic urgency
and clever politics: Jordan’s liberalism has always
manifest in fascinating ways, as he is never anything
less than matter-of-fact, shown here in the scene
in which Kitten’s best friend Charlie (Ruth Negga)
makes a last-minute decision to not have an abortion—no
speechifying or grandstanding, simply the emotional
realities of her situation. Likewise, a particularly
brutal British policeman (Ian Hart) turns out
to be a conspicuously kind chap, even after mercilessly
beating the tar out of Kitten while under the
false assumption that she’s an IRA terrorist,
while other films would prefer to merely demonize
him. Of course, a little of this optimist whimsy
can go a long way, but Jordan is able to circumvent
all of the usual narrative pitfalls—Kitten never
becomes a mere bystander to the swath she cuts
through history. Late in the film, Jordan stages
one of the best scenes of his career, when Kitten,
dolled up in a sky-blue silken frock and honey-blonde
curls glides seductively on a swing in a peep-show
booth before the eyes of a surprise visitor. DP
Declan Quinn’s every angle is exquisite, every
hue pops like the most vivid Technicolor, yet
Jordan never for a moment sacrifices the emotional
reality of his main character (who would be delegated
to the supporting cast as Village Weirdo #3 in
most other films), capturing in amber-tinted close-up,
profile, and silhouette Murphy’s simply stunning
lucidity. It’s a moment that recalls Wim Wenders’s
Paris, Texas (high praise, indeed) yet
has a flavor and vision all its own; the peep
show, doubling as a Catholic confessional booth,
coalesces all of Jordan’s religious, social, and
sexual concerns into one perfect image.
Above all else—politics, history, music, Voltaire—what’s
most important in Jordan’s universe is his unapologetic
sexual individualism. Throughout many dispiriting
moments, never once is Murphy’s Kitten made to
mourn her own sexual “confusion”: seemingly, nothing
could be more determinate. Whether Patrick’s primary
reason for living out her life as Kitten is due
to reasons sensual (she does fall in love more
than once with quite masculine men during the
course of the film) or oedipal (when first applying
makeup, she models herself after South Pacific
movie star Mitzi Gaynor, whom her mother is said
to have quite resembled) seems beside the point,
as no psychological motivation is dwelled upon.
At one moment Kitten is called “lad,” while in
the very next scene he is dubbed “Miss.” It’s
a testament to Jordan’s blasé yet proprietary
view toward sexuality (never “otherness,” he’s
always warmly inclusive) that one of his riskiest
flights of fancy lands as light as a feather:
two robins bookend Patrick’s tale with subtitled,
tweeting commentary. Like Patrick, they’re at
once earnest and acidic, and completely enchanting.
And from a birds-eye view, who can really judge?
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