
Cold souls
5 of 7 people found this review helpful.
Capote, the movie, takes us to the dark side of the American story in more ways than one. It’s a tale about the way narcissism can poison relationships and twist values. It deals with the causes and aftermath of a terrible, multiple murder but it also questions the pursuit of fame and success. It tells us: "Be careful what you wish for".
Born in Alabama in 1924, Truman Capote, wanted fame and success more than most and he achieved it early. He has been described as the most perfect writer of his generation. But as an extravagant gay man, Capote was fascinated for public attention long before the concept of celebrity was part of the American culture.
On Nov. 16, 1959, Truman Capote noticed an article in a newspaper about a Kansas family who were killed. Immediately, he telephoned the editor of The New Yorker, where he held a weekly column, wondering if he would be interested in an article about the murders. Later in his life, Capote said that if he had known what would happen as a result of this impulse, he would not have stopped in the little town in Kansas, but would have run away "like a bat out of hell".
At first, Capote thought the story would be about how a small community was dealing with the tragedy. That’s until two men, Perry Smith and Richard Hickock, are arrested and charged with the crime. As Capote gets to know them, he's consumed by a story that would make him rich and famous, but eventually destroy him. His non-fiction novel, In Cold Blood, became a best seller and inspired a movie, but Capote was emotionally devastated by the experience and it’s been said that it haunted him to his death.
Sort of an alternate angle on In Cold Blood, Capote chronicles the unlikely friendship between writer and murderer. Capote and Smith shared a sense of defiance and loneliness, but as the film progresses, the relationship grows one-sided, and Capote's attitude toward Smith changes from empathetic and compassionate to exploitative and manipulative.
In that respect, the film is also about the tricky ethics of journalism and the way in which Capote the writer was eventually swallowed up by Capote the celebrity. That second Truman Capote is the one who still lingers in the public imagination, and Hoffman does a superb job at revealing the lonely man behind the extroverted public persona. What an extraordinary performance.
Isn’t the point of a good movie when you walk out of the theater and can’t stop thinking about it? For me, it was disturbing, I’m still thinking about it and I’d recommend to anyone who actually likes a movie with substance to see it. I’ll see it again. I know that already.
Review ID: 10000000001794225

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