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Auntie Mame The reason it has such a strange feel is because it is so stagy. Many scenes, if not most, are shot as if this was a film of an actual stage production. The movie even goes so far as to end scenes by fading to black, keeping the foremost character lit a moment against the darkness, then fading out completely. It feels like a stage production where the lights go down following a scene.
On the other hand, the movie is essentially a fantasy, a fable, and this approach does help to emphasize the unreality, in the fantastic sense, of the story. (Fantasy here does not refer to anything magical or supernatural.) It's the story of a 10-year old boy whose father dies. The father leaves his son to his sister, the boy's Auntie Mame, a firecracker of a woman with a powerful, zestful personality and very definite opinions about things. Those opinions are, primarily, liberal.
Based on a novel, the movie recounts their adventures together. They are numerous and there is little point in detailing them. It is told from the boy's perspective and is about Mame, particularly her relationship with the boy as he grows into manhood.
The movie succeeds in large part because of Rosalind Russell's incredibly energetic performance. (You can almost hear voices crying out, "No more coffee for her!") Mame's attitude is summed up pretty succinctly when she says, in the movie's best remembered line, "Life is a banquet and most poor suckers are starving to death!"
Does that aspect work? Again, yes and no. At a distance of more than 45 years, it probably doesn't strike us the same way it hit audiences back in 1958 yet it still resonates, at least to some extent. Primarily, however, it works as a great characterization of a wonderful personality. Buy it on Amazon: - Amazon.com © 2003 Piddleville Inc.
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