Revenge,
couture go hand in hand in Aussie film 'The Dressmaker'
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[September 16, 2015]
By Solarina Ho
TORONTO (Reuters) - Secrets
and high fashion fuel the fires of revenge in "The
Dressmaker", a period film about a sophisticated woman
who returns to her small-minded Australian town to seek
retribution against those who sent her away as a child
accused of murder.
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The film, which stars British actress Kate Winslet as the
titular character, and features Australians Judy Davis, Liam
Hemsworth and Hugo Weaving, depicts some of the ugliest facets
of human behavior through the town's eccentric residents.
Tilly Dunnage is a dressmaker who worked for the great couture
fashion houses of Paris. She uses her skills to make sumptuous
attire for the frumpily dressed residents of her Australian home
town in exchange for information to piece together the truth of
what happened when she was a child.
Oscar-winning Winslet is no stranger to extravagant period
costumes, and the iconic 1950s styles are center stage in "The
Dressmaker" against a backdrop of dust and tumbleweed.
"The film is very visually arresting," said Winslet. "It's such
a beautiful period ... For me, that is when the female shape
probably started to be celebrated."
The movie had its world premiere this week at the Toronto
International Film Festival and is directed by Jocelyn Moorhouse,
whose previous works include "Proof" and "How to Make an
American Quilt".
The film serves as a platform to showcase the well of talent
from Down Under. Davis is compelling as Winslet's mother - "Mad
Molly" to the rest of the town - while Weaving plays the
secretly cross-dressing Sergeant Farrat.
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Winslet, who was seen earlier this year in "Insurgent" and appears
in "Steve Jobs" next month, described Tilly as headstrong,
self-possessed, and unapologetic about who she is.
"It was a real thrill to come across something like this - playing a
character who is all of those things. And it's funny, and it's very
touching ... it was very different from anything I'd done before,"
she said.
Hemsworth's character, Teddy McSwiney, falls in love with Tilly,
despite their vastly different backgrounds and her resistance.
"I read it and I just couldn't stop thinking of my dad and grandpa
... their way of life, the way they were brought up, in the same era
and world," said Hemsworth, describing them as very quirky,
fun-loving, family-oriented and charismatic.
"I tried to bring as much of (them) into the character as I could."
(Reporting by Solarina Ho, editing by Jill Serjeant and Andrew Hay)
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