‘The Ladykillers’ is about half bad
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PEGGY ROGERS
To get the audience laughing, comedies rely on putting extreme
characters into extreme situations. The Coen brothers, the
writers/directors of “The Ladykillers,” fill their black comedy with
unexpected extreme surprises of people in unusual circumstances.
Professor Goldthwait Higginson Dorr, PhD (Tom Hanks) is a
smooth-talking Southern gentleman, a professed musicologist, who is
actually a thief by trade. His landlady, Marva Munson (Irma P. Hall),
is a churchgoing devout widow able to smell trouble quicker than a
police dog at a drug bust, without being able to know exactly where
it’s coming from. The unlikely pairing of Dorr masterminding a
riverboat casino heist under Marva’s roof and her constant watch over
him and his bumbling gang of crooks holds a lot of promise. When the
action stays between the professor and his landlady, the film works.
Once the action shifts to the supporting characters, however, the
story stalls.
The explosives expert with missing digits, the quick and deadly
martial artist afraid of a woman and the dumbest thief of the group
are extremely cartoonish in nature compared to the black comedy tone
set by Dorr and Munson. The supporting characters inhabit a different
physical universe than the professor and Marva. Like cartoon
characters, they get beat up, smacked around and blown up without
deadly consequences. The no-real-harm-done effect does set up the
surprising turn of events, but it’s an extremely long wait for the
payoff.
The supporting characters are given a lot of screen time to set up
the film’s last laugh. The Coen brothers employ a heavy hand to make
sure everyone in the audience is following the setup by covering the
same action repeatedly for each of the four crooks on Dorr’s crew.
It’s like rewinding the DVD to watch the same scene again, which is
disruptive to the forward movement of the story.
Hanks plays Goldthwait with such enthusiasm and a zeal that stands
out like a flashlight in an underground tunnel. Watching the
professor -- who resembles a cross between the Kentucky Fried Chicken
Colonel and a nervous Nellie -- sweet talk Marva using 50% charm and
50% manure is hilarious. Every time Dorr pours on his charm and lies
to Marva followed by her giving him the once-over, that’s when “The
Ladykillers” starts pouring on the laughs.
“Fargo” was the Coen brothers largest commercial box-office draw
to date. “The Ladykillers,” like “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” has a
strong Southern flavor rooted so firmly in the past that the comedy
won’t appeal to the general audience. While the comedy rule of
extremes works extremely well in the film, it’s the only element that
does. Like Dorr, the movie is charming, but only 50% of the time.
* PEGGY J. ROGERS, 40, produces commercial videos and
documentaries.
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