Breakfast on Pluto Movie Review
Breakfast on Pluto Review

"Breakfast on Pluto" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Neil JordanProducer : Neil Jordan,Alan Moloney,Stephen Woolley
Screenwiter : Neil Jordan,Pat McCabe
Starring : Cillian Murphy,Liam Neeson,Stephen Rea,Brendan Gleeson
Neil Jordan doesn’t make bad movies. Even if the story isn’t spectacular (The
Good Thief), the visuals are always stunning and the acting is consistently so
striking that you’re never bored by what you see. There are times that cultural
patterns remain unclear (The Crying Game) and you’ll feel lost in the muddle of
figuring out exactly what’s going on, but the trick is to just watch without
dissecting. You’re guaranteed to walk out stimulated by the events that
occurred.
The same holds true for his latest, Breakfast on Pluto, starring the
ever-impressive chameleon Cillian Murphy (28 Days Later, Batman Begins) as an
orphaned transvestite in Ireland during the 1960s and ‘70s. After seeing brief
passages of his playful struggle to maintain his identity from one boarding
school to the next in working class suburbia, we’re swept up in the journey of
Patrick, a.k.a. “Kitten,” as he heads to the wilds of London in search of the
mother who left him behind.
It’s a given early on that young Patrick is different and his inclination for
wearing feminine articles is not merely some form of rebellion. While most
films will concentrate far too much time on creating moments of mental crisis
for those of a “deviant” sexual orientation, Patrick is refreshingly strong in
personality and outlook. To make up for the verbal battering he receives in his
unforgiving community, his vivid imagination creates a narrative to guide the
movie between reality and how he’s dealing with or denying it.
His meandering journey to find some group in which to fit and find the love he
was always denied by absent parents leads him into fascinating situations with
people who are just as amazed by his self-perpetuated naïve nature as we are.
From traveling with a band to taking shelter in a peep show house, he manages
to barely escape the political problems of a torn Ireland that doesn’t want the
likes of him anyway.
Though there are sections that feel interminably long -- the film runs over two
hours and doesn’t necessarily move at a steady pace -- Patrick is compulsively
watchable throughout. The plot remains interesting as well because it’s
impossible to predict where the next adventure is going to lead, or even if
Patrick is going to come to some foul fate from pissing off the wrong person
with his antics. Because of the violent background of the time period in which
it is based, literally anything could happen to any of the characters and make
absolute sense.
Breakfast on Pluto is told through a fable-like lens, but Jordan shies from
pushing any specific morality on the audience. It’s simply an entertaining
story of an eccentric young man who gets to have some amazing experiences by
sticking to his goals and partially living in a dream world in order to cope
with the real one.
Reviewed as part of the 2005 New York Film Festival.
Where's Gandalf when you need him?
Reviewer: Rachel Gordon





