I went to see this movie without knowing anything about it - except what was written on the poster - that this was a story about a transvestite who reinvents him/herself as a cabaret performer in 1970's London. ** SPOILERS ** Let me tell you it is not the story of a cabaret performer at all. In fact, there is no mention of 'Kitten' ever being a cabaret performer, nor are there any scenes about it.
Instead Kitten is a baby left on the doorstep of the parish priest and given to a gnarly step mum, and becomes a lost soul on a quest to find his real mum. But before he leaves his village, he causes a bit of havoc at school because he is so outspoken. Then he travels and has adventures, sort of like a fable. In London and Ireland, he (Kitten) is not a cabaret performer, instead she is a kept creature of nefarious men, like a hillbilly rocker and a weird magician. Kitten does get on stage twice, once dressed as an Indian, and then as the assistant of the magician. Later she works as a peep show girl, a job that a friendly policeman gets her.
Kitten imagines that she is the love child of the local Irish parish priest and his cleaning lady, and that's why she travels to London to seek her mum, whom she calls 'The Phantom Lady' and imagines her to look like Mitzi Gaynor. As a schoolboy he even writes an essay about the town's priest impregnating her, and thus Kitten is born. The movie follows his life as a boy who dresses in his sister's clothes and is regularly beaten by his gruff step mom. The thing that impressed me was Kitten's resilience, and this made me stay in the theater. It was a bit too long, but Kitten and his best friend, a half-black Irish beauty of a girl named Charlie pulled at my heart strings. I just loved Charlie. I loved Kittens' eyes, they are so huge and beautiful (Cillian Murphy's eyes) and his sense of humor so strong that I had to stay and watch this movie to the end. I want to watch it again so that I catch all of the humor and one liners and the things about the conflict in Ireland. Plus the music was great.
The adventures of Kitten could be the truth, or just something he imagines, but whatever the actuality, his life is so bittersweet that it caught me by surprise and I just found myself drawn to him/her in spite of myself. And it ends with a baby being born, so that's always a symbol of hope.
Instead Kitten is a baby left on the doorstep of the parish priest and given to a gnarly step mum, and becomes a lost soul on a quest to find his real mum. But before he leaves his village, he causes a bit of havoc at school because he is so outspoken. Then he travels and has adventures, sort of like a fable. In London and Ireland, he (Kitten) is not a cabaret performer, instead she is a kept creature of nefarious men, like a hillbilly rocker and a weird magician. Kitten does get on stage twice, once dressed as an Indian, and then as the assistant of the magician. Later she works as a peep show girl, a job that a friendly policeman gets her.
Kitten imagines that she is the love child of the local Irish parish priest and his cleaning lady, and that's why she travels to London to seek her mum, whom she calls 'The Phantom Lady' and imagines her to look like Mitzi Gaynor. As a schoolboy he even writes an essay about the town's priest impregnating her, and thus Kitten is born. The movie follows his life as a boy who dresses in his sister's clothes and is regularly beaten by his gruff step mom. The thing that impressed me was Kitten's resilience, and this made me stay in the theater. It was a bit too long, but Kitten and his best friend, a half-black Irish beauty of a girl named Charlie pulled at my heart strings. I just loved Charlie. I loved Kittens' eyes, they are so huge and beautiful (Cillian Murphy's eyes) and his sense of humor so strong that I had to stay and watch this movie to the end. I want to watch it again so that I catch all of the humor and one liners and the things about the conflict in Ireland. Plus the music was great.
The adventures of Kitten could be the truth, or just something he imagines, but whatever the actuality, his life is so bittersweet that it caught me by surprise and I just found myself drawn to him/her in spite of myself. And it ends with a baby being born, so that's always a symbol of hope.
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