Ain’t No Fashionista Corner Boy-With
Robert Altman‘s Ready To Wear In Mind
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
Ready To Wear, starring Sophia Loren,
Marcel Marstrioanni and a cast of cameo performances by young and old actors,
models, designers and assorted hangers-on, directed by Robert Altman, 1994
Hey, I ain’t no haute couture guy, I
ain’t no fashionista. Don’t give a damn about Pret-a-Porter or Seventh Avenue.
Only time I was on that latter street was to score some righteous dope from a
foxy ready to wear model that a friend of mine knew and who was foxy in other ways
too. Hell growing up I was into flannel shirts (brown checkered ones), black
chino pants, uncuffed, cool in my circle then as against nerds who wore cuffed
pants if you can believe that, clunky work boots and midnight sunglasses wore
especially after midnight. Not much more differently than I am attired these days
except when for professional reason I suit up with the rest of the nine to five
crowd.
Yeah, I was a faux “beat” guy,
emulating Alan Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac and the crowd a little after their time
but before the “hippie” garb of my own generation took hold. That garb of mine
which drew mostly weird stares in high school and few dates from girls except
the ones who wore all black and were as alienated as I was, would translate not
too badly in the later counter-cultural “fashion” statement. A time when lots
of off-beat stuff got a reprieve for a moment before the world went back to business
as usual and us, most of us with it.
So that is the sum of my fashion
statement. Except I know what I like, know what I like when it comes to movies,
you know films, and so if I see the name director Robert Altman attached to a
film then I am in for a look almost despite the subject matter. Despite the
fact that this film, Ready to Wear
something of an oxymoron if you ask me if you looking even as a goof into the
world of high fashion, deals exclusively with the going and coming during the
annual Paris fashion week.
The fact of
the matter was in grabbing this one an all-star cast, an ensemble all-star cast
as was Altman’s favorite way to address some subject he was interested all the
way back to his classic Nashville and
before, also made me inquisitive. Such old (okay, okay mature) stars as Sophia
Loren and Marcello Mastrioanni as head-liners, young ones like Tim Robbins and
Julia Roberts early in their careers and a whole who’s who of middle-level
Hollywood film names added to the pot. Of course the plot line in this one as
in many of Altman’s films (that Nashville
again being an early model) is a throw away as he is looking at the foibles of
whatever cultural gradient he is taking aim at. An alleged murder of a high
ranking bureaucrat in the fashion industry by Marcello raising a “red flag,” a
false red flag as it turned out in the end, was the vehicle used by Altman to
take a “slice of life” look at the very high end of the fashion industry, the
place where price does not matter, is not even mentioned in gentile society as
long as people, the right people look in the right way. High fashion has gotten
so much play lately, is “in” with its
own series of “reality” television shows showing a candid world how pieces of
cloth get turned into, okay, okay beautiful if in some cases off-the-wall clothes.
Along the
way there are many sub-stories, some rather mundane like the wife of a retail buyer’s
shopping spree. A few worthy of note like the “race” between three high-powered
fashion editors for a well-known fashion magazines over acquiring a certain
highly regarded fashion photographer and how he turned the tables on all three,
a fling between Tim and Julia who wind up never leaving their hotel room the
whole week and watching the thing on television between bouts of love-making,
and the various sex-apades of the well-known designers and their consorts and
lovers running the gamut from assumed heterosexual love to the well-known gay
life epidemic in the industry and everything in between-and outside.
Of course
there was that silly over-riding faux murder plot that was so much hot air but
the real star, the real story here is the incredible efforts necessary to
produce high end fashion. That and the intense competition among the designers
to be the new “next best thing” the thing that women talk about over lunch or
at the water cooler although stuff they are very unlikely to buy whether they
could afford to or not. This old “beat” flannel shirt, chinos, work boots guy
has to admit that while some of the fashions might be over the top some of them
are really works of art. This confirmed to me that the trend toward showing
fashion trends past and present in art museums is the right move. If you like
Robert Altman films or like high fashion this one is for you. And no I still ain’t no
fashionista-okay.
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