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Some Like it Hot (1959) [Blu-ray] (AFI: 16)
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Rated: |
NR |
Starring: |
Jack Lemmon, Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, George Raft, Pat O'Brien, Joe E. Brown. |
Director: |
Billy Wilder |
Genre: |
Comedy |
DVD Release Date: 05/10/2011 |
When Chicago musicians Joe (Tony Curtis) and Jerry (Jack Lemmon) accidentally witness a gangland shooting, they quickly board a southbound train to Florida, disguised as Josephine and Daphne, the two newest - and homeliest - members of an all-girl jazz
band. Their cover is perfect... until a lovelorn singer (Marilyn Monroe) falls for "Josephine," an ancient playboy (Joe E. Brown) falls for "Daphne," and a mob boss (George Raft) refuses to fall for their hoax!
Nominated for six Academy Awards, Some Like It Hot is the quintessential madcap farce and "one of the greatest of all film comedies" (The Motion Picture Guide).
Storyline: When two Chicago musicians, Joe and Jerry, witness the the St. Valentine's Day massacre, they want to get out of town and get away from the gangster responsible, Spats Colombo. They're desperate to get a gig out of town but the only job
they know of is in an all-girl band heading to Florida. They show up at the train station as Josephine and Daphne, the replacement saxophone and bass players. They certainly enjoy being around the girls, especially Sugar Kane Kowalczyk who sings and plays
the ukulele. Joe in particular sets out to woo her while Jerry/Daphne is wooed by a millionaire, Osgood Fielding III. Mayhem ensues as the two men try to keep their true identities hidden and Spats Colombo and his crew show up for a meeting with several
other crime lords. Written by garykmcd
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Casey Broadwater on May 10, 2011 -- As Marilyn Monroe walks by, hips sashaying in a rhythmic va-va-voom, Jack Lemmon's character in Some Like It Hot turns to co-star Tony Curtis in admiring disbelief:
"Look how she moves. Like JELL-O on springs! She must have some sort of built-in motor or something. I tell you, it's a whole different sex!" Sex is right. Some Like It Hot is all about it, and although no one does the deed onscreen, the
movie is rife with both verbal and visual innuendo. And then, of course, there's the central conceit: Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis spend most of the film in drag— lipstick, high heels, dresses, and all. This was—if you'll pardon the pun—ballsy stuff for
its time, and Some Like It Hot, released without MPAA certification, presented a direct challenge to the soon-to-be-outmoded Hays Code, which had rigidly controlled what couldn't be shown or mentioned in Hollywood productions since the 1930s. But
there's more to the film than light blue humor and lingering views of Monroe's celebrated T&A. Some Like It Hot deserves to be listed alongside writer/director Billy Wilder's other masterpieces—it's as lasting and influential as Double
Indemnity or Sunset Boulevard—and it's widely regarded, for good reason, as one of the greatest American comedies in cinema history.
Opening in Prohibition-era Chicago, Some Like It Hot's lengthy prologue—loaded with gangster movie tropes—may leave you thinking you're watching the wrong film. There's a casket filled with bootlegged rum! A funeral home that's a secret speakeasy!
A mob boss (George Raft) who orders a tommy-gun massacre! The intent is to give some dramatic weight and danger to what would otherwise be a straight-up screwball comedy, and it works. Down and out musicians Joe (Tony Curtis) and Jerry (Jack Lemmon)
witness this mass murder and to escape getting mowed down, they take the first out-of-town gig they can get. The only problem? They'll be playing with "Sweet Sue and Her Society Syncopators," an all-girl jazz band. It's only for three weeks, though, and
it's easy money, so Joe and Jerry get all dolled up, rechristen themselves as "Josephine" and "Daphne," and board a Florida-bound train with the other Syncopators.
The humor here is immediate—they're surrounded by buxom, blond-haired beauties, and there's nothing they can do about it. They're horny wolves in sheep's clothing, and Jerry hilariously has to keep reminding himself, "I'm a girl. I'm a girl. I'm a girl."
The sexual predicament is amplified when they both fall for "Sugar" Kane Kowalczyk (Marilyn Monroe), the band's chest-heavy, pouty-lipped singer, a runaway who has a thing for sax players. To gain Sugar's affection, Joe—a sax man—dons an additional
disguise as "Junior," a yacht-owning millionaire, and hijinks ensue as he scrambles to keep all of his identities straight. Meanwhile, "Daphne" receives a marriage proposal from an actual millionaire—played by the loony Joe E. Brown—and accepts,
believing he can scheme his way into receiving monthly alimony checks when they inevitably divorce. Joe sees numerous problems with this plan, chiefly, "What are you gonna do on your honeymoon?" Jerry, not even considering the implications,
replies, "We've been discussing that. He wants to go to the Riviera, but I'm kinda leaning toward Niagara Falls."
The screenplay, co-written by Wilder and his frequent collaborator I.A.L. Diamond, crackles with these kinds of clever reversals, rich with wink- wink subtext. Where a similarly themed film today would go for broad, raunchy gags aimed at the lowest
common denominator, the comedy in Some Like It Hot is both sexy and sophisticated, implicit rather than explicit. This was partially mandated by the boundaries of polite taste at the time, but Wilder also understood that it's better to keep an
audience in a state of longing, to leave just enough unseen and unsaid that viewers take pleasure filling in the blanks with their imaginations.
This goes for his visual gags as well as the dialogue. When Marilyn Monroe is onstage coyly singing "I Wanna Be Loved By You," she wears a nearly see-through gossamer dress that—from a distance—looks to be barely there at all, with stitching that
accentuates the anatomical details we know lie just underneath. Even more tantalizingly, Wilder throws a spotlight on her face but leaves her breasts in the shadows below, a directorial tease that's highly intentional. Later, there's a great scene where
Sugar and Joe—as the millionaire "Junior"—find themselves alone together on a yacht that Joe has discretely commandeered. Lying on a couch, Joe tells Sugar about his inability to fall in love and how, when he's with a girl, "it does absolutely nothing to
me." The undertone is clear; he's actually talking about impotence—performance anxiety—and I don't think you have to strain to also read hints of homosexuality into the conversation. Sugar, concerned, asks if she can "take a crack" at curing him. They
share a long, slow kiss in close-up, and in the background, out of focus, we see Joe's leg rise triumphantly into the air. "Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar," Sigmund Freud once supposedly said about his ever-present, unmistakably phallic stogie, but in
this case, a leg is most definitely not just a leg.
Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon are simply brilliant as the two cross-dressing imposters. Although his goofy Cary Grant impersonation as "Junior" has always seemed like the film's one false move, Curtis is great as the relative straight man—so to speak—to
both Jerry and Sugar. Lemmon gets to let loose more—a lot more—and in his performance, which amounts to controlled comic anarchy, you can see the stylistic germ of many future comedians, most notably Steve Martin, who seems to have borrowed Lemmon's
timing, physicality, and even a few facial expressions for his own career. I don't think anyone would blame him. Lemmon was one of the greats, and this was one of his best roles. Marilyn Monroe, however, is the star that gives Some Like It Hot its
gravity and shine. She's perfect as "Sugar" Kane, because—and this is true in almost all of her films— she somehow exudes innocence even while she positively oozes sex. This is partly attributable to the "dumb blond" persona that Wilder helped establish
in The Seven Year Itch—perpetuated here in lines like, "Real diamonds! They must be worth their weight in gold!"—but what really gives Sugar dimension is how similar she seems to the real-life Marilyn, who was also always trying to run away from
her past. She's buoyant, and a little air-headed, but the character is grounded by her world-weariness. She's been emotionally abused, kicked around, abandoned by guys who leave nothing behind but "a pair of old socks and a tube of toothpaste all squeezed
out." We want to see her make good, to see her naiveté rewarded. That Marilyn is incredibly sexy too is the icing on an already-filling cake. The name "Sugar" is apropos; Marilyn is both refined and raw, sweet and deliciously decadent.
Comedically, Some Like It Hot is about as good as it gets, and you don't have to take my word for it—in 2000, the American Film Institute named it the greatest American comedy of all time. The film looks and sounds fantastic on Blu-ray, but in
terms of supplements, this re-release is pretty much a straight port of the 2-disc Collector's Edition DVD from 2006. Still, for fans, an upgrade is definitely in order, and for those that don't yet own the film, this is the version to get. Highly
recommended!
Cast Notes: Marilyn Monroe (Sugar Kane Kowalczyk), Tony Curtis (Joe), Jack Lemmon (Jerry), George Raft (Spats Colombo), Pat O'Brien (Det. Mulligan), Joe E. Brown (Osgood Fielding III), Nehemiah Persoff (Little Bonaparte), Joan Shawlee (Sweet Sue),
Billy Gray (Sig Poliakoff), George E. Stone (Toothpick Charlie), Dave Barry (Beinstock), Mike Mazurki (Spats' Henchman), Harry Wilson (Spats' Henchman), Beverly Wills (Dolores), Barbara Drew (Nellie).
IMDb Rating (08/09/11): 8.4/10 from 78,123 users Top 250: #78
IMDb Rating (10/15/07): 8.3/10 from 42,096 users Top 250: #81
IMDb Rating (08/09/01): 8.5/10 from 8,096 users Top 250: #44
Additional information |
Copyright: |
1959, MGM / UA |
Features: |
• Audio Commentary featuring an interview with Tony Curtis, archived interview with Jack Lemmon and commentary by Paul Diamond (son of I.A.L. Diamond) and screenwriters Lowell Ganz & Babaloo Mandel
• The Making Of Some Like It Hot
• The Legacy Of Some Like It Hot
• Nostalgic Look Back Documentary
• Memories From The Sweet Sues Featurette
• Virtual Hall of Memories
• Original Theatrical Trailer |
Subtitles: |
English, Spanish, French |
Video: |
Widescreen 1.66:1 B&W Screen Resolution: 1080p |
Audio: |
ENGLISH: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
SPANISH: Dolby Digital Mono
FRENCH: DTS 5.1
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Time: |
2:01 |
DVD: |
# Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1 |
UPC: |
883904233398 |
Coding: |
[V4.0-A4.0] MPEG-4 AVC |
D-Box: |
No |
Other: |
Producers: Billy Wilder; Directors: Billy Wilder; Writers: Billy Wilder, IAL Diamond; running time of 121 minutes; Packaging: HD Case. One of the American Film Institute's Top 100 American Films (AFI: 14-22).
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