Catsuits and bodysuits in popular media

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File:Les Vampires - Irma Vep.gif
Juan-José Moréno (Fernand Herrmann) confronts Irma Vep (Musidora) in Les Vampires episode "Hypnotic Eyes".

Catsuits are a recurring costume for fictional characters in various media, as well as for entertainers, especially for use in musical performances. They are sometimes referred to as "bodysuits", especially in reference to a full-body suit worn by a man (although bodysuit usually refers to a legless garment); catsuit is typically used only in reference to women.[1][2]

The catsuit has been identified as a film-maker's costume of choice for stealth.[3] In films like Irma Vep, Les Vampires and Heroic Trio, crime and catsuits are featured together, as well as its major original use in Alfred Hitchcock's To Catch a Thief.[3][4]

A trend of bodysuits was observed by film reviewer Alan Farrell in his book High Cheekbones, Pouty Lips, Tight Jeans, and a number of occurrences of the garb in films were mentioned – Charlize Theron in Aeon Flux, Milla Jovovich in the fourth and fifth film of the Resident Evil franchise, Carrie-Anne Moss in The Matrix, Angelina Jolie in Lara Croft: Tomb Raider, Kate Beckinsale in Underworld, and Raquel Welch in Fantastic Voyage.[5] The trend of leather and vinyl catsuits were identified as an attempt to redefine the gender role of women through films.[6] Theresa L. Geller described the catsuit as a part of the Hollywood tough chic paradigm in an article published in the journal Frontiers.[7] That view was shared by Sherrie A. Inness in her book Action Chicks, which also included computer games and professional wrestling in that paradigm.[8] The Action Heroine's Handbook describes the catsuit as one of the three options of the first rule of thumb described in the book: "Dress to accentuate your best physical assets".[9] Action Chicks: New Images of Tough Women in Popular Culture by Sherrie A. Inness describes catsuits as an iconic garb of female TV and film characters.[10]

Movies and television series

Notable uses of catsuits or similar full-body garments include:

Music videos

Notable uses of catsuits or similar full-body garments include:

Video and computer games

Notable uses of catsuits or similar full-body garments include:

Post-modern thesis

In a post-modern thesis on the superhero genre Michael Lecker wrote, "In the superhero genre, clothes do the talking through semiotics, which [Roland] Barthes discusses in depth in his work: The 'first, literal message serves as a support for a second meaning, of a generally affective or ideological order' (Roland Barthes[45]). The cat suits that adorn the feline hybrid characters in this genre are firstly illustrating their connection to felines. On the ideological level, the costumes signify the attributes that our society has projected onto cats and that the characters embody."[46] In another post-modern thesis on sadomasochism in cinema Andrea Beckmann wrote, "Cinematic SM is twisted into the non-consenting, violent realm of the unhinged that we know it is not. Fetishism is used as an excuse for a bit of titillatory semi-nudity, or to identify the villain – the man in black leather. Horror films, in particular, will happily throw in a leather catsuit or a gratuitous bondage scene to spice up a mediocre script (M Olley, Pam Hogg: Warrior Queen of the Catwalk[47])."[48]

References

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  1. Bodysuit, Dictionary.com
  2. Catsuit, Dictionary.com
  3. a b Paula Deitz, "Origins of Casual Style", The New York Times Magazine, 1989-08-20
  4. "Danger clad in a catsuit", The Age
  5. Alan Farrell, High Cheekbones, Pouty Lips, Tight Jeans, p. 15, Lulu.com, 2007, Template:ISBN
  6. Elyce Rae Helford, Fantasy Girls, p. 6, Rowman & Littlefield, 2000, Template:ISBN
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  8. Sherrie A. Inness, Action Chicks, p. 72, Palgrave Macmillan, 2004, Template:ISBN
  9. Jennifer Worick, Joe Borgenicht and Larry Jost, The Action Heroine's Handbook, p. 73, Quirk Books, 2003, Template:ISBN
  10. Sherrie A. Inness, Action Chicks: New Images of Tough Women in Popular Culture, p. 72, Palgrave Macmillan, 2004, Template:ISBN
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  14. Nick Morrison, "Catsuits? I'd rather wear nothing at all.", The Northern Echo, 2004-06-16
  15. Dennis Fischer, "The Avengers", St. James Encyclopedia of Pop Culture
  16. a b Bill Osgerby and Anna Gough-Yates, Action TV, p. 225, Routledge, 2001, Template:ISBN
  17. Dave Thompson, "Black and white and blue: adult cinema from the Victorian age to the VCR", ECW Press, 2007, Template:ISBN, p. 215
  18. Valerie Steele, Encyclopedia of Clothing and Fashion, p. 80, Charles Scribner's Sons, 2005, Template:ISBN
  19. Dave Rogers, The Complete Avengers, p. 89, Boxtree, 1989
  20. Gillian Freeman, The Undergrowth of Literature, p. 5, Nelson, 1967
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  24. Efrat Tseëlon, Masquerade and Identities, p. 74, Routledge, 2001, Template:ISBN
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  27. James Chapman, "Inside the Tardis: the worlds of Doctor Who : a cultural history", I.B. Tauris, 2006, Template:ISBN, p. 57
  28. Temple Drake and David Kerekes, Headpress Guide to the Counter Culture, Headpress, 2004, Template:ISBN
  29. Jami Bernard, The X List: The National Society of Film Critics' Movies that Turn Us On, p. 151, Da Capo, 2005, Template:ISBN
  30. Paul Tatara, "'Irma Vep' puts stake in the heart of current cinema", CNN, 1997-06-12
  31. Stacy Gillis, The Matrix Trilogy, pp. 120–121, Wallflower Press, 2005, Template:ISBN
  32. Laura Avery, Newsmakers 2004 (Sub Part 4), p. 353, Gale Research, 2000, Template:ISBN
  33. Merle Ginsberg, "Sugar and Spice"Script error: No such module "Unsubst".Template:Cbignore, W (on High Beam), 200-12-01
  34. Sarah Street, Costume and Cinema, p. 94, Wallflower Press, 2001, Template:ISBN
  35. Susan Carpenter, "'Matrix' magic maker", Los Angeles Times, 2003-05-15
  36. Kym Barret biography, Future Design Days
  37. Michele Orecklin, "In the Future, Black's Back". Time. 2003-05-12.
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  39. Liz Ohanesian, Rare Underworld Movie Props and Costumes Up for Auction, LA Weekly, 2009-02-04
  40. Carol Clerk, Madonnastyle, p. 132, Omnibus Press, 2002, Template:ISBN
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  42. James R. Blandford, Britney, p. 60, Omnibus Press, 2002, Template:ISBN
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  45. Roland Barthes, The Fashion System (Trans. Matthew Ward and Richard Howard), p. 28, Hill and Wang, 1983
  46. Michael Lecker, Treacherous, deviant, and submissive: female sexuality represented in the character Catwoman,Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Bowling Green State University
  47. T. Woodward (Ed.), The Best of Skin Two, p. 19, Richard Kasak, 1993
  48. Andrea Beckmann, Deconstructing myths: the social construction of "sadomasochism" versus "subjugated knowledges" of practitioners of consensual "SM" Template:Webarchive, University of Lincolnshire and Humberside

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Further reading

  • Meredith Levande, "Women, Pop Music, and Pornography", Meridians: Feminism, Race, Transnationalism, Fall 2008, Vol. 8, No. 1, pp. 293–321
  • Valerie Steele, Fetish: Fashion, Sex & Power, Oxford University Press, 1996, Template:ISBN