Roger O. Thornhill: “Now, what can a man do with his clothes off for twenty minutes?”

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The following essay is about the emotional journey of Cary Grant’s suit through North by Northwest.

The essay worked slowly on me. At first I resisted it, maybe it seemed too silly (although there was nothing silly about clothes to the impeccable Grant)? But I was wrong – I figured that out once I succumbed to the essay. It’s a keeper. Well worth reading the entire thing.

I loved this bit:

In the suit are a number of subtle tools for Cary. It’s so well cut you can’t tell if he’s even carrying a wallet (turns out he is). Here’s what he’s got in that suit! He goes all the way from New York to Chicago to the face of Mount Rushmore with: a monogrammed book of matches, his wallet and some nickels, a pencil stub, a hanky, a newspaper clipping and his sunglasses — but these are shortly to be demolished when Eva Marie Saint folds him into the upper berth in her compartment. (Really this is a good thing, because Cary Grant in dark glasses looks appallingly GUILTY.) All this stuff fits into the pockets of the most wonderful suit in the world. Does the suit get crushed in the upper berth as his Ray-Bans are smashed? No. Cary keeps his jacket on in the make-out scene that follows. The suit defines him, he’s not going to take off that jacket. I know this feeling.

Beautiful (and surprisingly deep) essay. Well done.


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2 Responses to Roger O. Thornhill: “Now, what can a man do with his clothes off for twenty minutes?”

  1. ilyka says:

    Now I have to watch that again from the suit’s viewpoint. This killed me:

    You cannot violate the white shirt of the Sixties. You might kill me but you will never kill this shirt.

    It’s true. It’s indestructible.

  2. red says:

    Ilyka – I know, right? Indestructible, indeed.

    How the hell are you??

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