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Closed Caption; Audio commentary with director Neil Jordan and Cillian Murphy; Behind the scenes of Breakfast on Pluto
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Breakfast on Pluto
1. Start [2:32]
2. Not Himself Lately [1:56]
3. A Boy, Not a Girl [3:23]
4. City Swallowed His Mother [1:53]
5. A Father Discovered [2:26]
6. An Idea of His Conception [4:50]
7. The Need for Glamour [4:11]
8. Druid Philosophy [2:56]
9. Out on His Own [6:22]
10. Dance of Seduction [5:36]
11. Troubling Times [4:20]
12. Much Too Serious [7:15]
13. Searching the City [4:00]
14. Hop One, Hop Two [4:35]
15. A Spritz in Time [3:40]
16. Magical Man [7:02]
17. "A Girl Like You" [4:56]
18. Disaster Looming? [3:50]
19. An Explosive Evening [2:30]
20. Kitten's Statement [5:09]
21. Back to the Streets [:00]
22. Police Assistance [5:57]
23. "I Knew His Father" [4:32]
24. The Personal Touch [1:24]
25. Home [7:14]
26. Waggely, Definitely [6:15]
27. Christmas "Gift" [3:59]
28. New Family [2:21]
Filmmaker Neil Jordan seems to seek out stories built around protagonists who are outsiders struggling to function in inhospitable and often openly hostile environments. And in Patrick Braden, Breakfast on Pluto's protagonist, he's found just such a character. Abandoned by his mother while still an infant, Patrick grows up in foster homes and develops some sexual-identity issues. Eventually he leaves his small Irish community and goes to London, where he works as a cross-dressing cabaret singer while trying to find his mother, who is rumored to be living there. At one point reduced to street prostitution, Patrick -- who prefers to be known as "Kitten" -- refuses to surrender his individuality and remains true to his own nature, which is delicately superficial. Jordan surrounds Kitten (played as an adult by Cillian Murphy) with vaguely Dickensian characters, among them a street-smart vagabond (Brendan Gleeson), a second-rate magician (Stephen Rea), and a kindly priest (Liam Neeson). He also plunges Kitten into some colorful, albeit unlikely, situations: At one point, following the bombing of a London pub in which he's been working, Kitten is believed to be an IRA soldier. As in The Crying Game, Jordan uses the Irish-English "troubles" of the 1970s as an underlying stark reality; but since this is Kitten's story, there's much more whimsy at play. This would not have worked if not for Murphy's astonishing performance, which makes this unpredictable movie a rewarding change of pace. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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