Sunday, January 9, 2011

Cultural Gap Film #8: Breakfast at Tiffany's

Relevant elements: Audrey Hepburn's image and style

Why it resonated:
The main character's free-spirited self-invention captured the cultural moment of the early 1960s


General comments on the film: Of all the films on my list, I might have had the worst grip on what the movie was actually about for this one. I haven't seen Titanic, but I know the main plot points. The same goes for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and just about every other remaining film. But as I sat down to watch Breakfast at Tiffany's, I realized I had no clear idea of the scenario, plot, or characters. The only preconceptions I had were the iconic image of Audrey Hepburn in a black dress with pearls, a dramatic updo, and a cigarette holder, and the knowledge that Mickey Rooney played an offensive Asian stereotype. Although I'd heard Deep Blue Something's pop song of the same name about three billion times, that tune doesn't actually provide any details about the film other than the fact that the people in the song "both kinda liked it."

Imagine my surprise when a host of recognizable actors' names popped up in the credits: George Peppard, Patricia Neal, Buddy Ebsen.... And "Moon River" was from this movie! Why didn't I know more about this? As for the plot, it turns out to be a fairly recognizable, if implausible, masterplot: young country girl escapes her restrictive and boring existence by running away to the big city and taking on a sophisticated persona. Throw in a struggling writer straight man, and the formula is complete.

The details, however, are what make this movie striking. The fashion, dialogue, and overall atmosphere of the burgeoning "swinging '60s" feel just right to capture the cultural moment. I kept imagining the creators of Mad Men pausing the DVD to scribble down visual details. Actually, you could say that this film chimes with that series in an important way, as Don Draper's identity switch echoes that of Holly Golightly pretty loudly.

I wish that some version of "Moon River" didn't play every ten minutes (--speaking of not really knowing much detail about something coming in, I'd never really listened past the first line of that song, so can somebody tell me what the heck a "huckleberry friend" is?), and the looking-for-the-cat-in-the-rain romantic ending was cheap and undercut the impact of the narrative, but overall I have to say that I kinda liked the film, too.   

2 comments:

  1. I urge your reconsideration of Bridget Jones Diary at the end of this project.

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  2. I didn't think he was going to do 'Moon River' then BAM - second encore!

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