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Cillian Murphy plays day-dreaming
transvestite Patrick 'Kitten' Braden in Breakfast on Pluto. |
Breakfast On Pluto
Thursday July 27, 2006
By Peter Calder
Herald rating: * * * *
Irish director Neil
Jordan made his name with a film about a cross-dressing character - Dil, in The
Crying Game - but her sexual identity functioned both as moral shock and
vicious plot twist.
From the moment he
flounces on screen in this exuberant, funny, sometimes shocking and always
utterly beguiling film, young Patrick Braden (Murphy) leaves us in no doubt
about his sexual proclivities.
Patrick, who goes by
the name Kitten, is a young, hopelessly romantic transvestite growing up in
Ireland in the 1970s.
In such a context, his
behaviour is unlikely to endear him to parents and schoolteachers but from the
first scene he holds us in the palm of his hand.
The film, based on a
novel by Pat McCabe, whose The Butcher Boy Jordan adapted 10 years ago, is
about a young man coming to terms with who he is, but also with his past.
We soon realise that
the local priest (Neeson) is more than a spiritual father to Patrick and that
his mother is a cleaning woman who left her baby on the church steps and left
town with her shame. For the length of the fast-moving film, Kitten embarks on
a journey of self-discovery which, in a roundabout way, aims at finding his
mother.
En route, he
encounters a procession of oddballs almost as outlandish as he is: the
mohawk-topped lead singer in a band who turns out to have a very dangerous
sideline, a nightclub magician (Rea), and a cop (Ian Hart) who morphs from his
homophobic tormentor into a gruff protector.
Jordan has likened
Kitten to Voltaire's Candide, the template of the innocent abroad in a
dangerous world. But that writer satirised the blind optimism of his character;
Jordan's attitude is more affectionate.
Kitten's approach to
life as a dizzy, chiffoned fantasia is the only way to deal with a hostile
world in which the appearance of affection is almost certain to disguise cruel
ulterior motive.
Yet significantly,
Kitten does not become self-absorbed or selfish. Indeed the generosity of his
spirit - obvious from the first scene, to which the rest of the film, a long
flashback, works its way back - shines from every frame.
Jordan has extracted
terrific performances from his ensemble, but Murphy is a revelation. The main
character in Ken Loach's upcoming The Wind That Shakes The Barley, he is here a
character of texture and depth who makes most screen cross-dressers look like
vamping queens and it takes a hard heart indeed not to fall completely in love
with him.
With a soundtrack
bursting with hits from Handel through Cole Porter to T Rex, many of which act
as a sly commentary on the action, this film gives a new twist to the meaning
of the term "picaresque" and is unhesitatingly recommended.
Cast:
Cillian Murphy, Liam Neeson, Stephen Rea, Brendan Gleeson, Bryan Ferry
Director: Neil Jordan
Running time: 124 mins
Rating: R13, sexual references, offensive
language and violence. Screening: Rialto