Kate Winslet’s “The Dressmaker” Celebrates Heritage as featured 1951’s Singer Sewing Machine becomes Instrumental in Bringing New Fashion to Life
Kate
Winslet’s latest runway romp of a movie, “The Dressmaker” takes us back to an
era where fashion took a wild turn from the old to the contemporary. When new designers such as Balenciaga and
Dior came to revolutionize and free the body from the trappings of fashion’s
yesteryears.
In
“The Dressmaker,” Kate Winslet dons the character of Tilly Dunnage, a woman who
returns to her town for her ailing mother and right the wrong that separated
them twenty years ago. Their years apart
gave way to Tilly’s nascent talent in dressmaking, which she learned from her
mother, Molly (Judy Davis) at a very young age.
Tilly
arrives to her hometown alone and armed with a luggage and a Singer sewing
machine, she begins to make space for her belongings and reconcile with her
mother, ultimately, stitching the events from the townsfolk responsible on
accusing her of murder at a very young age. In Dungatar where “The Dressmaker” is set
during 1951, everybody knows everybody and they all have a secret.
Cabin-crazed, bitter, grasping and small-minded, the town folk maintain a
precarious equilibrium as they know that their secrets are not safe.
The
stakes are raised when Councillor Evan Pettyman (Shane Bourne), who virulently
hates Tilly and Molly, employs the buttoned-up Una Pleasance (Sacha Horler), a
rival dressmaker from Melbourne, to compete with Tilly and bring her down.
In
a no-holds-barred showdown between Tilly’s and Una’s creations, it becomes
clear that the transformation of the residents of Dungatar has only exaggerated
their many flaws, and revealed just how ugly and black their hearts are. Their
obsession with Tilly’s couture designs will be their ultimate unravelling, and
Tilly’s final triumph.
Fashion
in “The Dressmaker” is about disguise. Tilly Dunnage takes advantage of the
women in the town and appeals to their sense of competition and vanity. The
women of Dungatar haven’t looked or felt good for a very long time, so it’s a
way of luring people and giving them a false sense of hope. Tilly simply gives
them enough rope – or ribbon – to hang themselves with. She lets them “bring
themselves unstitched”, as Rosalie puns.
Hugo
Weaving, who plays Sergeant Farrat, an eager recipient of Tilly’s skills says:
“The tone of it’s the difficult thing with this film. Everything needed to be
grounded in a reality and a truth but at the same time there’s a heightened reality to it, so it’s slightly
surreal. The characters are both drawn from life, very specific types, but a
lot of them are larger than life and the costumes need to somehow reflect
that.”
Kate
Winslet says: “Tilly has trained as a couture dressmaker in France with
Balenciaga and Dior and Madame Vionnet. The Dungatarians don’t really
understand quite how magical and beautiful her creations truly are, they think
it’s ‘dress up’. It’s kind of a gift that she’s giving them, as well as
carrying out little bits of revenge along the way. They go from looking pale
and a bit tea stained to looking like they’re all walking down a red carpet.
It’s really quite striking.”
The
featured Singer Sewing Machine 160 used in “The Dressmaker” is a model made
during 1951 for the company’s 100th anniversary special
edition. Singer sewing machine started
in 1851, and will be celebrating its 165th birthday next year (2016). In the
Philippines, Singer is proudly exclusively distributed by Monteverde Sewing
Machine, Inc. (website: www.singerphilippines.com)
“The Dressmaker” is now showing (opend
November 4) in theatres from Axinite Digicinema.
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