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Nasty 'Dressmaker' opts for style over substance

In "The Dressmaker," Kate Winslet plays Myrtle "Tilly" Dunnage, a seamstress who returns to her tiny Australian hometown, nursing a lifelong grudge against her former neighbors and hoisting a Singer sewing machine like a six-shooter.

Set in the early 1950s, this toxic tale of madness, mendacity, perversity and revenge is a manic, ultimately wearying pastiche of that era's cinematic genres. One minute it's quoting the twangy foreboding of spaghetti Westerns, the next it's paying homage to moody noir thrillers. Adapted from Rosalie Ham's novel by the director Jocelyn Moorhouse (who co-wrote the script with her husband, P.J. Hogan), "The Dressmaker" recalls the fable-like grotesqueries of Tim Burton and Terry Gilliam, interweaving witty deep focus shots and carefully designed and staged vignettes with repellent notions of human behavior. More fatally, the filmmakers pay no attention to narrative or tonal coherence, instead trotting out wildly disconnected scenes that, at their best, bear little or no relation to what's come before, and at their worst, are downright offensive.

The details of Tilly's misfortunes in the minuscule outpost called Dungatar eventually become clear, as do the reasons for her 25-year exile. Less logical are the reasons for her return. Granted, she wants to reconnect with her mother, a dotty, cantankerous old bat (played with snaggle-toothed relish by the great Judy Davis). And, OK, she wants to avenge her mistreatment as a child, when the mayor, schoolteacher and sundry bullies framed her for an act she didn't commit.

Distractions aside, "The Dressmaker" looks great, thanks to Donald McAlpine's superb cinematography and gorgeous costumes. Winslet makes a meal of her role as the wronged femme fatale, and both Davis and Hugo Weaving - who plays a crossdressing police sergeant - deliver wickedly funny performances.

But those bright spots don't make up for what ultimately becomes a tiresome, increasingly nasty slog. Over-plotted, undercooked and extremely well-dressed, "The Dressmaker" has style to burn, but it has a mean streak as wide as the Outback.

“The Dressmaker”

 ½

Starring: Kate Winslet, Liam Hemsworth, Judy Davis, Hugo Weaving

Directed by: Jocelyn Moorhouse

Other: A Broad Green Pictures-Amazon Studios release. Rated R for language and violence. 118 minutes

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