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Cathy Timberlake (Doris Day), una chica provinciana y chapada a la antigua, vive en Nueva York y su mayor deseo es enamorarse y crear un hogar feliz. Comparte piso con Connie (Autrey Meadows), otra chica en su misma situación. Un día, mientras Cathy acude a una entrevista de trabajo, un coche le salpica el vestido manchándoselo de barro. Es el Rolls Royce de Philip Shayne (Cary Grant), un atractivo millonario que enseguida muestra interés por ella.
Avis de la communauté (2)
Do you have a movie that taught you what “adulthood” should look like—only to realize years later it was selling you a fantasy? That Touch of Mink was someone’s seminar in how to be a man of means: say “Mr.”, summon a Rolls, purchase a corporation before lunch, and expect the world—especially women—to giggle and comply. Reader, behold the aspirational myth…and the subtext humming beneath the silk. • Meets lineage – Meets: Sabrina (1954) + That Touch of Mink (1962) ⇒ proto-Ferris Bueller (1986) • The lineage is all there: wealth as charm school, Manhattan as wish machine, a breezy disregard for labor and logistics. You can practically draw a dotted line from Philip Shayne’s frictionless executive cosplay to Ferris’s city-as-toy-box strut. • Parallels – Parallels: Pretty Woman; Pillow Talk; Lover Come Back; The Apartment • Luxury-as-transformation (Sabrina, Pretty Woman), chaste naughtiness and gender games (the Day-Hudson romps), corporate fantasia without accountants (The Apartment, but minus Wilder’s conscience). • Queer-coded thread – Subtext: Roger’s rapture • Gig Young’s Roger doesn’t merely assist; he adorizes. He beams, hovers, gushes—his therapy scenes all but script a romantic misunderstanding with Philip. The shower chat, the in-taxi undressing, the ever-present “man Friday”: textbook Production-Code semaphore for a bond that dares not speak, so it smirks. • Power & gender – Hierarchy: men speak, women are spoken for • Roger repeatedly manhandles Cathy (Doris Day)—grabbing, steering, “placing” her like a prop on Shayne’s chessboard. The film treats it as comic efficiency; modern eyes see the choreography of entitlement. The male chain of command is the oxygen of every scene. • Executive fairy dust – Business: GE by handshake • Philip “buys” General Electric the way one buys a necktie: he simply pops by the owner’s office. The naiveté is the point—capital as magic trick, not system. It’s capitalism as bedtime story. • Culture echoes – Mythmaking: the Cohn-and-protégé vibe • The film’s pedagogy of power—find a ruthless mentor, absorb the code, wear the city like a glove—echoes later real-world mythologies. Recent dramatizations (e.g., that Trump/Roy Cohn biopic) lean hard into that dynamic: the apprentice tutored in domination, image, and immunity. Different decades, same catechism of swagger. • Craft pleasures – Style: couture, camera, and cream-swirl strings • Bergdorf fittings served by models and champagne, that sumptuous Rolls gliding through the grid, the Automat’s chrome-and-coin ritual, the swells of the orchestra cueing every blush and clinch. You don’t watch; you window-shop the early-’60s dream. • Visual memory – Iconics: • The in-taxi costume change with bare feet flung up like punctuation. • The psychiatrist’s running gag, capped by that stroller tableau—domestic bliss as diagnostic punchline. • Day’s hair and makeup: spun sugar lacquered to perfection, a halo engineered for CinemaScope. • Theme diagnosis – Aspirational cinema as operating system • Movies like this didn’t just entertain; they programmed. Be rich, be obeyed, be adored. Take the girl, take the town, take the meeting. For young men, a (seminal, not Seminole) blueprint. For everyone else, a silk-wrapped compliance manual. • Snark, sealed – Best/worst lesson: • If you can’t close the deal, buy GE before breakfast and call it character. • Verdict – Heart vs. eyebrows: • I swoon for the gowns, the gloss, the orchestral mousse; my eyebrows stay at half-mast for the power play and grab-and-giggle consent. As a time capsule, it’s mint; as a manual, it’s malarkey. • ★★★½ out of ★★★★★ — come for the couture and coded glances, stay to interrogate the dream it sells. — Crafted with Hudson—an AI collaborator for creativity, innovation, and human potential. Explore what’s possible at OpenAI.
there were some hilarious moments in this