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Some Like it Hot (Billy Wilder) 1959 /
Tootsie (Sydney Pollack) 1982
So, basically, the films, despite their new endowments, can still be judged as any other film is. Unfortunately, I find they both come up lacking. Let us first consider Some Like it Hot, the better of the two. The film, which is a bit too long to start with, takes its time getting to its one-joke premise. In order to justify the leads’ cross-dressing hyjinks, the film creates an elaborate, gangster-filled plot set during the Prohibition era. This element seems to be at odds with the film’s admirable central theme of the arbitrary nature of sexual identity. There seems to be no attempt to tie the film’s two crises together, and as a result much of the material feels slack. Even when the film’s central topic is on full display, many of the comedic scenes are played with such a telegraphed obviousness that the film’s comedic impact is severely dulled. Out of the entire cast, the only one to truly hit the right note consistently is Marilyn Monroe, as the sweet, dumb blonde.
It is odd that Some
Like it Hot is the much more relaxed film when it comes to the subject
matter, since it's much older. Still, both feel far too broad to attain any sort
of relevance. The bottom line is that neither of these comedies is that funny.
They both manage their greatest comedic charms when they work at their simplest
levels, but always manage to spoil the fun with elaboration. For example, in Hot,
several speakeasy operators are seen drinking milk when a police raid occurs.
This is an excellent background visual gag, but surely enough, the dialogue
calls our attention to it. Both films also manage to amuse through simply
showing their gangly male leads as they awkwardly move about in woman’s
clothing. But in both films, the pleasure derived from this is moved off the
screen so plot can continue. It’s a shame both filmmakers felt it necessary to
make important films about such ultimately silly subjects. Perhaps that’s why
the proceedings feel forced on both counts. Some Like it Hot **1/2 Tootsie *1/2 October, 2001 Jeremy Heilman |