
Billy
Wilder’s Some Like It Hot is an
enduring cinematic treasure. Mixing cheer and cynicism, snappy, sophisticated
dialogue and slapstick, the movie veers between low and high comedy,
incorporating elements of other genres as well, with quite a few winks in the
direction of the gangster film. Exuberant, explosive, and exhilarating, it is
decidedly ahead of its time in playing with images of male and female
sexuality, conventions, and stereotypes. The film is a study in deception,
disguise, and Darwinian drives, as the two male characters take on a number of
different identities of both genders and everything in between, blurring the
boundaries between the sexes. Marilyn Monroe, as Sugar Kane, is both virgin and
vamp, blending, like she has throughout her career, the threatening sexuality
of the femme fatale with the innocence, naïveté, and sweetness of a child. She
infuses every corner of the film, turning an improbable farce into a vehicle
for hope and tenderness, making the film rise above its existence as a Hollywood
comedy into a buoyant look at the larger human comedy.
***Spoiler Alert! This is an analysis of the film, not a review, and it contains spoilers. That being said, enjoy...