Watched "Breakfast at Tiffany's" today. It's a movie I'd been trying to catch for some years now -- and it just happened to be showing on the telly. Coincidentally, it's 50 years since its release and I can understand why people still talk about it.
This 1961 film was perhaps Audrey Hepburn's most challenging cinematic role and she excels at playing the eccentric Holly Golightly.
Hepburn lost the acting Oscar to Sophia Loren that year (perhaps unfairly) but there's no denying she brings the character to life.
I'd loved Hepburn in "My Fair Lady" and "Roman Holiday" but there is something magical about Hepburn's "mean reds", her personality and her equation with the cat in "Breakfast at Tiffany's" that will make this the more memorable role.
I'd read the novella some years ago and had been wondering if the film version did it justice. Critics often say Hepburn's Holly is a toned-down version of what author Truman Capote created in "Breakfast at Tiffany's", but I say it's an improvement. I liked all the changes for the film version and my only regret is they should have got an Asian actor to portray Holly's Japanese neighbour. Others think so too.
As for the film's controversial 'happy' ending, which Hollywood romance would be complete without it. The unresolved ending of the novella had left me dissatisfied. What's the point, I thought as Holly and her cat went their separate ways.
The movie (spoiler ahead) instead brings Holly, the cat and the writer together in the rain, in an embrace that almost suffocates the poor feline. (Animal rights activists, where were you in 1961?)
Hepburn's rendition of "Moon River" (which won the Oscar for 'Best Song') is one of my favourites and watching the famous sequences unfold on screen was even better.
All in all, a great way to spend my Sunday. If you're a sucker for Hollywood romances, this one is for you. If you haven't already, go watch "Breakfast at Tiffany's".
Sunday, February 06, 2011
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
Meet Sona Mohapatra. The singer with the "ancient" voice who floored audiences with her debut album Sona . Pop star, folk singer, ...
-
My colleague, an Indian-origin Brit, finds it hard to believe that India is Asia's third-largest economy. "They say we will be ov...
-
I don't believe in stereotypes but some of the things in the following 'forwarded email' do ring true. If you are Bengali , you ...
-
One would have thought natives of Finland won't know much about India, so it was a pleasant surprise to come across a Finn blogging abou...
-
Being a fan of modern plumbing, I am usually not too keen to spend time in 15th-century forts. But heritage hotels are different and an off-...
-
Richard Gere kissed Shilpa Shetty. India flared up. Or did it? Gere's interview to Jon Stewart prompted one YouTube user to comment that...
-
Me: Welcome Sir Isaac, I've always wanted to speak to you about your great discovery. Sir Isaac Newton: No great discovery was ...
-
After 20 years of living in a not-so-posh area of south Delhi, we have shifted to the subcity of Dwarka. Yes, there have been teething troub...
-
I don't like attending press conferences by Shah Rukh Khan. You are likely to find yourself packed in a room with some 500 photographers...
-
Just when you thought British newspapers and websites had all but forgotten about Celebrity Big Brother winner Shilpa Shetty, here comes the...
