Women He's Undressed (2015) Poster

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8/10
interesting story of someone you never heard of
HerbieStretch13 September 2015
I went along to this film with a female friend as a favour, otherwise I would never have watched it. I was however, pleasantly surprised. There is joy in learning something new. This film gives you an insight into something that ordinarily you wouldn't think twice about - costume design in films. The narrative is presented in an interesting way - in the first person and from those who actually knew Orry-Kellly which gives it a lovely authenticity and contemporary feel rather than just being a piece of dry history. Being based on the life of a Hollywood employee in the days when the big studios ruled - Paramount, MGM and Warner's, there is some nice scandal too. The film helps you to relive, or maybe see for the first time the style and glamour of early Hollywood - even during times of international economic hardship. All in all, worth a watch.
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7/10
A unique doc on one of Hollywood's prolific costume designers
backwardsiris15 March 2018
In WOMEN HE'S UNDRESSED, director Gillian Armstrong attempts to uncover the man behind some of cinema's most iconic looks, costume designer Orry-Kelly. Theatrical reenactments & monologues from Orry-Kelly & his mother (played by Darren Gilshenan & Deborah Kennedy), guide us through his life--from his childhood in the small Australian seaside town of Kiama, around the world to New York City (where his roommate is fellow immigrant, Archibald Leach, later known as Cary Grant), to his career in Hollywood, in which he garnered 3 Academy Awards. Interspersed with these staged scenes are interviews with those who knew & worked with Orry-Kelly (Ann Roth, Angela Lansbury, Jane Fonda, to name a few), as well as costume designers, film critics & biographers who have been influenced by his work. Unlike many Hollywood homosexuals of the day, Orry-Kelly refused to hide behind a lavender marriage or staged identity, as his old flame Cary Grant would hardly acknowledge their past together. Being his authentic self may have fueled a drinking problem, but it also allowed stars like Bette Davis, Katharine Hepburn, Ingrid Bergman & Marilyn Monroe to fully trust his talent for making them shine in his designs. Even Tony Curtis & Jack Lemmon petitioned Billy Wilder to let Orry design their costumes in Some Like It Hot. While Orry-Kelly is not a household name in today's world, the looks he created for movies like Jezebel, Casablaca, Irma la Douce & Auntie Mame are unforgettable.
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7/10
(As I'm Sure You've Guessed)... He Had Undressed Some Of the Best
StrictlyConfidential15 June 2020
At the height of his career - Australian-born fashion designer, Orry-Kelly was one of the most successful creators in his field during Hollywood's golden years.

If you are interested in seeing what all of the fuss was about when Orry-Kelly dressed Tinseltown celebrities in "top-of-the-line" style - Then - You need look no further than this totally entertaining, fashion-conscious documentary.

I think that it's incredible to note that in his 30 years of costume design - Orry-Kelly was credited for his contributions to nearly 300 films.
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9/10
A well rounded and researched story of a master at his art and craft - costuming
gfoulds13 July 2015
I will not attempt to precis the content of this film. Gillian Armstrong and her production team have created a swiftly moving film about Orry-Kelly that needed to be told before all living connections to his work die.

For anyone interested in what goes into making a film this is a must see documentary that follows a real story arc. He has his high and lows but most of all Orry-Kelly had respect from the Hollywood industry from studio heads down.

Some of the well documented activities of some of Hillywood's biggest stars may come as a surprise to some.
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10/10
Great Designer Gets A Great Documentary
HarleanHayworth7 September 2016
I'm a huge fan of classic movies and I loved this documentary about fashion designer Orry-Kelly. He dressed all the greatest stars of the 1930s and 1940s - Bette Davis, Kay Francis, Ingrid Bergman, and Marilyn Monroe. He won three Academy Awards! His personal life was even more fascinating. He was openly gay and the great love of his life was Cary Grant!!! This documentary focuses a LOT of time on Cary. He was in the closet and he broke Orry's heart. This documentary is based on Orry's unpublished autobiography so I believe it's true. They don't sugarcoat Orry's battle with alcoholism which he won after going to rehab in the 1950s. I hope film fans watch this documentary and become a fan of Orry. He was an important part of Hollywood history.
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9/10
Fun, inventive, moving and surprising; an endorsement from someone who thought they were not all that interested in the subject
runamokprods31 December 2016
A terrific biography of Australian-born Hollywood costume designer (and 3 time Oscar winner) Orry-Kelly. Gillian Armstrong's fun and emotional look at Kelly's often challenging life includes wonderful taking heads; actresses like Jane Fonda and Angela Landsbury, great designers of the more modern era like Ann Roth and Catherine Martin, film and Hollywood historians like Leonard Maltin and others. They tell absorbing stories about the wildly talented, sometimes wildly difficult perfectionist, as well as heartbreaking ones about his personal life as a gay man in Hollywood at a time when being 'out' was still cause for possible unemployment and human banishment. These attitudes and threats led to – among other things - a terribly painful and ultimately cruel break-up of many years from his early lover and one time best friend Archie Leach, later known as Cary Grant.

But what makes the documentary much more interesting than most Hollywood hagiographies are the more theatrical elements Armstrong and screenwriter Katherine Thompson bring to the party. Along with the great stories, clips and still photos there are also actors playing Kerry (an excellent Darren Gilshenan), his mother and others from his life. Kerry enthusiastically narrates his own story in the midst of wonderfully surreal, theatrical and playfully symbolic settings (rowing alone in a tiny boat is a constant metaphor). These sequences paradoxically bring both lightness and depth to the film, giving us a far more personal connection to the man than most screen biographies have. In the end it's both a lot of fun and tremendously sad and informative about the sexual and human politics of Hollywood, and their costs on real human beings (not only gay men, but women both straight and gay as well).

One of those films I almost didn't see since it's not a subject that called out for me, only to be very happily surprised at how much I got out of it.
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10/10
For moviegoers who like to have fun......
tkn1001526 July 2020
Warning: Spoilers
It made me laugh at the hypocrisy and homophobia in Hollywood. Silly to pretend that anything has changed. Orry-Kelly was a survivor. He kept coming back to top himself. There is a great deal to learn in how he dressed Bette Davis in Now Voyager to suit the scene and the mood. As Jane Fonda said, how wonderful that Orry-Kelly designed outfits to help actors get more in character. His close friendships with very private careful people tells me he was a man of character..
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1/10
School project
MrDeWinter16 September 2021
The theatrical re-enactments and monologues look cheap, too long and boring. Shame they left footage and pictures of the real Kelly for the very end of the documentary.
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10/10
Everything a costume lover could want
nonadeplume3204 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Orry-Kelly has been an idol of mine for about the past 40 years. I fell in love with this era of films very early because there was no such thing as cable and you had 4 channels. Until Ted Turner created WTBS and we got that free. That was where I met all these wonderful films and actors for the first time and I was hooked.

After a while I started noticing I liked certain costumes far better than others, especially glamorous evening gowns, so I started reading the credits and that's how I met Orry-Kelly.

His gowns were never fussy, never out of porportion, funny fabric messes. They were as sleek as the fabrics he used and the cut was always sharp as a tack. Feminine but not frothy. Not an inch of fabric was wasted.

Despite my obvious bias, this was a very well make, organized documentary. It stayed on point and guides you through his evaluations. The glue which holds it together is, of course, the boat. That was an ingenious way of combining archival footage and interviews with his narrative.

The actors were great! Cary Grant was a ginormous a. H. to Sorry. After Sorry have him not only style but love. I cried.

Wonderful movie. I'm so happy I've had him in my life all these years.
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1/10
Appalling travesty
esmondj7 March 2016
This unwatchable show is chock full of bizarre directorial conceits, which start immediately with the odd notion that Orry-Kelly is 'unknown' despite having no fewer than 302 movie credits as one of the best-known costume designers in Hollywood from 1930-63. Curiously enough this claim is specifically contradicted by one of the first interviewees.

The tale is largely told using shots of the protagonist rowing a boat, for no apparent reason whatsoever; his mother is cruelly reduced to an Edna Everage caricature putting out the washing next to a lighthouse, for some other unexplained reason; there is not nearly enough of the actual dresses, which is the actual point after all; and even the title is wrong. Orry-Kelly dressed women, not undressed them. The remainder is basically the usual unsubstantiated scuttlebutt about Cary Grant, Randolph Scott, etc.

Among many other inaccuracies, David Selznick did not produce Casablanca.
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2/10
Where's Orry?
jery-tillotson-121 March 2021
For any fan of old movies, especially those of Warner Brothers, the name of "Orry-Kelly" is as familiar to us as Bette Davis, Max Steiner, Michael Curtiz. Yet, in watching this documentary about one of the most legendary of the grand studio wardrobe designers, we never once see an image of this iconic wardrobe pioneers until the very end, where he bounds up to the stage on Academy Awards night to accept an Oscar for "Some Like It Hot." Throughout the movie, we're told how impish, out-spoken, talented he is, that he developed a serious drinking problem which eventually got him fired from Warner Brothers but we never actually see Orry-Kelly during his heyday. Surely there are hundreds of photos, if not film footage, of this fascinating and very out gay pioneer. What irritated me to no end were the endless shots of this designer in a row-boat, beating his oars against the waves. Over and over again. What did this mean? More film time is wasted with insertion shots of someone playing Orry-Kelly's mother who reads letters and pontificates about her son and which serves no purpose to advancing the story of the subject. It is certainly no news that he and Cary Grant were rommmates for several years and they probably had a romantic relationship. Grant, although outwardly affectionate to his boyfriend, Randolph Scott, during his early years in Hollywood became ultra-closeted when a studio head warned him about the gossip of the two being more than buddies and so Grant, according to this documentary, became rabidly closeted and refused to have anything to do with Orry-Kelly until the very end of their lives when they reconciled. I wanted to see more of the actual working conditions and the actual dresses created by Orry-Kelly. The actor who portrayed the designer was highly irritating and there were more wasted minutes on him reflecting on his life throughout. Much more could have been done to illuminate one of old Hollywood's true pioneers who stood with the great clothes designer of that era--like Adrian, Edith Head, Walter Plunkett.
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I enjoyed it !
Byrdz28 October 2021
I liked it. I REALLY liked it. The clips and artsy crafty re-enactments and all.

Some of the other reviewers down graded the film because of the theatrical bits but they made it less cut and DRY documentary. MORE clips would have been nice but the job as it was , was well done !

A must see for any lover of films of the Classic Era.
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