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Friday
Feb072020

Defending The Irishman's costumes 

by Cláudio Alves

While we may love to criticize the Academy, sometimes we're also a little bit to blame for the perpetuation of their prejudices. For instance, Oscar watchers love to deride the way voters confuse "Best" with "Most". This is especially true in Best Costume Design, where period work rules and contemporary styles are locked out. Still, when a movie is nominated for a wardrobe that's not very glamorous or showy, that prioritizes male attire instead of women's fashion, the grumblings take on another color. Suddenly, it's as if such design work is lesser because it isn't showy.

It's not erroneous to criticize the costume branch for being so myopic this year, having only singled out Best Picture nominees. However, to look at the costumes of The Irishman and say they're unworthy of praise is utter nonsense…

Pardon the harsh language, but The Irishman is a design achievement of the uttermost excellence and it's been frustrating for this costume enthusiast to see it so lambasted.

For starters, costume designers Sandy Powell and Christopher Peterson had to contend with the dramatization of nearly 60 years of history, not to mention hundreds upon hundreds of costume changes for the main cast. The sheer magnitude of that challenge is fearsome and it would be easy to condone some stylistic shortcuts in the face of it. And yet The Irishman's costumes show no shortcuts. They are attuned to history and character, but they're also part of a singular cinematic aesthetic. 

Starting with simple, but noticeable things, let's talk about patterns and textiles. Sandy Powell's a good person to challenge the notion that only directors can be auteurs for it's almost impossible to confuse her work with any other designer's. Her films are always dressed in explosions of well-coordinated patterns and contrasting textiles with even the simplest of garments made visually interesting with a pop of unexpected texture. In Carol, she made some dreary Santa hats look luxurious in deep red velvet and in The Irishman she uses hundreds of different prints to add a punch of variation to the picture's images. Look through this movie's footage and you'll seldom find a tie in a solid color, for instance. They're always vibrant with geometric motifs or other patterns, both period-appropriate and aesthetically fun.

It's not only the ties. There's also the suits with interesting textures, a little girl's attire mixing up to five different striped textiles and other such weird quirks of style. The key to the success of such bold choices is how they don't call attention to themselves, fitting into the overall construction of the film, adding flavor but not distracting from the main ingredients. Color also plays a big part, working in unison with the sets and cinematography to create the illusion of a biography gradually drained of liveliness. In other words, in the 50s we have warm bright tones and they start to fade into shades of gray as the titular character gets closer to his last day on Earth.

For fashion history buffs The Irishman is also a delight because of its gradual evolution of styles across 20th century America. While it's true most of the epic's characters are men who spend their lives in sharp suits, Powell and Peterson found canny ways to characterize them through evolution or the lack thereof. Russell, for instance, is always elegant but his fashion sense tends to be two steps behind everyone else. Jimmy Hoffa's sense of conventional suiting never changes, putting him in sharp contrast with the snazzy stylings of someone like Tony Pro and his disrespectful shorts. The mob wives may look up to date, but they're démodé in comparison with their daughters, clinging to the beauty standards of their heyday rather than going with the flow of the times.

And then there's Frank and his attachment to the watch Jimmy gave him and the ring presented to him by Russell. He always wears them on the same hand, forever bound to those two men. Such details of costuming elevate The Irishman, helping build up its complicated central characters and the times they lived through.

That said, the most amazing instances of costuming in the movie are its crowd scenes, always full of supporting actors dressed with the care that's usually only afforded to stars. The extras look like period photographs come to life. Think of those smoky restaurants full of sharp-dressed men in capo collars, a Miami rally that negotiates formality with the Florida heat, a pastel wedding in all the horror of the 1970s craze for colorful polyester.

Do you agree that The Irishman deserved its Costume Design Oscar nomination?

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Reader Comments (11)

Well said. Lots of range shown.

February 7, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterMe

Very good case made.

I'm tired of the outrage about the Best Costume Design category. Yes, Hustlers should have been included. But the nominees are all deserving as well.

February 7, 2020 | Unregistered Commenterjules

Stephen Graham should have been nominated.

February 7, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterPeggy Sue

That still of Carrie and Irene is when the film very surprisingly passes the Bechdel test! (They talk about wedding gift, specifically whether to get a baby spoon for Anne Bufalino).

A lot of the best costume work of the film comes from the side characters, but still beautiful work.

February 7, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterRoger

It's a better nominee here than "Joker" (a real WTF, sorry Mark Bridges), but I don't think it's quite deserving of inclusion over, say, "Rocketman" or "Knives Out" to name just two.

February 7, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterJonathan

I loved this analysis and find this nomination deserving. Great costume design, like many other fields, should augment the story being told instead of being the main focal point.

February 7, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterBgk

I do not understand how people can criticise this nomination. Espescially the notion that it's just "a lot of suits." As if no one has ever been fitted for a suit before? Do people not recognise the exceptional talent that is good tailoring?

I loved Kris Tapley's interview with Powell & Peterson. They'd had an enormous job with this production and their recognition is fully deserved IMO. The wive's roadtrip outfits, Graham's shorts ensemble, Pacino's ties etc.

February 7, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterAndrew

Speaking truth to power, voters, complainers and blog runners. When the revolution comes protect Cláudio at all costs!

February 7, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterWhore hey

This and Joker's nominations are pretty crappy. "Rocketman" and "Dolemite is My Name" were more deserving. I get what you're saying but they're mostly just suits.

February 7, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterMorgan (the 1st)

Nominees this year are very weak. 😶

February 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterSe_bas_tian

I see only three Oscar winners for costume design that fall into line with the task presented by The Irishman. Edith Head's clothing in The Sting in 1973, Albert Wolsky's creations in Bugsy in 1991 and the costumes of Mark Bridges in The Artist set a standard for dressing men. All three designers are noted for making the men look dashing in their custom tailored suits.Hell, even John Goodman's studio head in The Artist pleased the eyes in his three piece number.

I don't think The Irishman rates a favorable comparison with these past winners and has no chance of winning this Oscar for Best Costumes. Sandy Powell and Christopher Peterson may experiment with fabric, patterns, and styles, but they don't make 70+ year old men look half their age. The visual effects to erase the wrinkles from the well known faces of these film titans may have been innovative, but their aged movements are not masked by these costumes. It's a throw back to the days when good costume design was more frequently defined by "most" instead of "best."

February 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterJames
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