Tootsie

Natasha Ross reviews

Tootsie
Distributed by
UCA Catalogue

Cover

  • Cert:
  • Cat.no: C8237356
  • Running time: 112 minutes
  • Year: 1982
  • Pressing: 2007
  • Chapters: 28
  • Region(s): 2, PAL
  • Sound: Dolby Digital 2.0 (Stereo)
  • Languages: English
  • Subtitles: English, French, German, Polish, Czech, Hungarian, Hindi, Turkish, Danish, Arabic, Bulgarian, Swedish, Finnish, Icelandic, Dutch, Norwegian, Portugese, Greek, Hebrew, Spanish, Italian
  • Widescreen: 2.35:1
  • 16:9-Enhanced: Yes
  • Macrovision: Yes
  • Disc Format: DVD 9
  • Price: £9.99
  • Extras: Filmographies, trailers

    Director:

      Sydney Pollack

    (Bobby Deerfield, Absence of Malice, The Electric Horseman, The Firm, Havana, The Interpreter, Jeremiah Johnson, Out of Africa, Random Hearts, Sabrina (1995), Sketches of Frank Gehry, They Shoot Horses Don’t They?, Three Days of the Condor, Tootsie, The Way We Were, The Yakuza)

Producers:

    Sydney Pollack & Dick Richards

Screenplay:

    Larry Gelbart & Murray Schisgal

Music:

    Dave Grusin

Cast:

    Michael Dorsey/Dorothy Michaels: Dustin Hoffman
    Julie Nichols: Jessica Lange
    George Fields: Sydney Pollack
    Sandy Lester: Teri Garr
    Ron Carlisle: Dabney Coleman
    Leslie Nichols: Charles Durning
    Jeff Slater: Bill Murray


Men dressing up as women in film is certainly something that has been done time and time again, but the one film in which it has been done so well and parts of which, so many later films have tried to reproduce, is Tootsie.

Directed by Sydney Pollack in 1982, it is the tale of ‘Michael Dorsey’ (Dustin Hoffman) an actor who is having a spot of trouble finding work, which is mainly due to the fact that he has problems getting on with the various producers he auditions for.

As well as directing, Sydney Pollack stars in the film as George, Michael’s agent who is losing his faith in him. He tells Michael that no-one in New York will hire him because he’s just too difficult and that he should sort himself out and get some therapy. So you can imagine George’s surprise and horror when he discovers what Michael has done. So very desperate for work, he disguises himself as a woman ‘Dorothy Michaels’ to audition for a role in a hit soap opera and surprisingly, bags the part – and so the fun begins.


Soon ‘Dorothy’ becomes a much-loved household name across America but things get increasingly complicated for Michael as he falls more and more in love with his co-star Julie Nichols (Jessica Lange), a single parent who is in a non-fulfilling relationship with the director of the soap, Ron Carlisle (Dabney Coleman).

It gets worse still for Michael when he realises that Julie’s father, Les (Charles Durning) is falling for ‘Dorothy’ and so he has to decide if he should come clean and let the nation in on ‘Dorothy’s’ secret and risk letting down not just those close to him, but a nation too.

The film was nominated for ten Academy awards and its clear why – Dustin Hoffman is brilliant, he plays Dorothy so well, it’s scary and nearly every scene he/she is in is hilarious! It was so funny watching Michael as Dorothy trying to squirm his way out of kissing a male co-star who is nicknamed ‘the tongue’.


There’s also a great scene where a very young Geena Davis stands around in her underwear talking to ‘Dorothy’, making Michael incredibly uncomfortable! I have to say, it is a little creepy watching a man shave his legs, pluck his eyebrows, don a wig and plaster his face in make-up, but somehow Dustin Hoffman pulls it off.

Everything about this film is great, right from Pollack’s directing, the strong and amusing cast (which even includes Bill Murray who is in and out of the film as Michael’s roommate), down to all those terrible ’80s hair-cuts and very bizarre outfits!

When I’d finished watching Tootsie I had a nice warm feeling inside and at the end of the film when Julie tells Michael she misses ‘Dorothy’ I found myself feeling the same and I’m sure you will too.


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