Directed by German émigré Billy Wilder, Some Like It Hot (1959) is perhaps most distinctly memorable for its final line, ‘Nobody’s perfect.’ Across his five-decade catalogue of work as a writer and director, Wilder is renowned for such punchlines, something that was likely learned from his mentor, fellow émigré Ernst Lubitsch. As a pithy response, the final line channels many themes of the film, most notably the acceptance of the role of performance in gender and identity. It could also be seen as a commentary on the structure of the film itself, which plays with genre and character conventions.
Some Like It Hot follows two musicians, Jerry (Jack Lemmon) and Joe (Tony Curtis), on the run after witnessing the Saint Valentine’s Day Massacre in Chicago, who disguise themselves as women…