{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "More Cats thoughts", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/189772345153/", "html": "<h1>More Cats thoughts</h1><p>The movie cleverly sets up the Jellicles as <i>theater people putting on a production</i> - several pieces take place on a stage or in a ballroom or what&rsquo;s set up to invoke a choreography studio.</p><p>As part of that, the movie leans into being not <i>queer</i> as 2019 would understand it but hella <i>gay</i> as 1981 London theater people would, before AIDS showed up - wistful old actors and Falstaffian toffs, Munkustrap the neurotic stage manager and Skimbleshanks the Elton John-level fabulous, the women respected old queens, fallen divas, fat or, um, catty.</p><p>Rebel Wilson seems to be playing Jenny Anydots as Hilda - fat, playful and subject to frequent pratfall comedy. Except sometimes she unzips her fur and turns out it was a disguise for\u2026 an also-fat warrior girl in pink roller derby spandex? I dunno, man.</p><p>Jason Derulo seems to be using some <i>&lsquo;90s</i> black British swagger for Rum Tum Tigger. Too far out of my wheelhouse to place, but I got reminded of Tricky, Goldie, and Cat from Red Dwarf.</p><p>And yeah, if someone hadn&rsquo;t made a thing of it, I&rsquo;d have no idea that Francesca Hayward, the ballerina who played white-furred perspective character Victoria, was half-Kenyan</p><p>For all it goes to present itself as a really London thing, the last entries in the credits thank production incentive programs from Quebec and South Australia, and judging by surnames a lot of post/CG stuff was done in India</p>"}