Wednesday, 18 June 2014

Finding Our Breakfast on Pluto

During the mid 70's a young trans-woman named Patrick "Kitten" Brady journeys from Ireland to London to find her long lost mother who was swallowed up by the  greatest city in the world. Played by Cillian Murphy, Kitten ends up working as a magician's assistant, a prostitute, a womble and a in a peepshow, the offspring of a priest, Kitten grows up in revolutionary Ireland, close to the border on Northern Ireland raised by his adoptive mother an environment from which he eventually escapes living rough for a few years.
This beautifully quirky dark comedy uses over thirty short chapters to explain the story of Kitten, a young transwoman, despite Kitten being trans, the film never judges her for her coices or for the hard decisions she has to make, and Kitten becomes a prostitute, and impersonates a BT saleswoman in order to find his mother. Cillian Murphy is astounding in the lead role, and he takes on not just the look of a woman, but also the mannerisms and posture. The character of Patrick is so much more than just a trans character, and throughout most of the film, inhabits a space somewhere between the hetero-normative binary system of male and female.
Kitten is essentially neither male nor female, although he starts the show biologically male, he spend the vast majority of the film inhabiting the space in between, Kitten's gender is a reference point for his emotions as he goes through his journey, he starts the film as Patrick, a young boy being raised near the Irish border by a woman he believes to be his mother, after he discovers his adoption, he begins to experiment with his appearance, taking on a more feminine or effeminate appearance.
Not knowing who his mother is, he spends the rest of the film in a sort of limbo, not knowing where he comes from, or who gave birth to him, and thus his external gender is also in a sense of limbo, he retains the names Kitten and Patrick, and works in a typically female industry with male clients, he also dates men and solicits work from male clients as a prostitutes. Towards the end of the film, when Patrick goes to see her mother, her appearance is drastically different, loosing the male aspects of her style and becoming a true physical woman.
Intentionally this happens before she even sees her mother, showing that the turning point of the film is not Kitten finding her mother, and discovering where she came from, but discovering who she is as a person and who she wants to be, she realizes that finding a sense of self will not come from finding her mother, but from finding herself. Cillian Murphy provides one of cinemas greatest performances in Breakfast On Pluto, a delightfully quirky dark comedy that remains one of the most sensitive and realistic portrayal of a trans character to date. Rating: A

Patrick "Kitten" Braden: Not many people can take the tale of Patrick Braden, aka St. Kitten, who strutted the catwalks, face lit by a halo of flashbulbs as "oh!" she shrieks, "I told you, from my best side darlings."

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