The Ladykillers
review by
Cynthia Fuchs, 26 March 2004
In the age of Montel
Marva Munson (Irma P. Hall)
lives and prays in the Baptist Bible Belt. She reveres her dead
husband, whose portrait looms from over the fireplace, and she will
suffer neither fools nor "that hippity hop music": "Do you know what
they call colored folks in them songs?" she harrumphs for Sheriff
Wyner (George Wallace). "Niggers: I won't say it twice. Two thousand
years after Jesus, 30 years after Martin. In the age of Montel."
Pious, earnest, and broadly drawn,
Marva is the first black character in a Coen brothers movie to
occupy center stage. For a minute, anyway, until her doorway is
darkened by Professor Goldthwait Higginson Dorr, III (Tom Hanks).
Doffing his white hat and sweeping aside his white cape, Dorr
smiles, presuming his intellect will overwhelm this sweet old lady.
When she insists that she only means to let her extra room to a
"quiet man," he reassures her, sort of, "Madame, you are addressing
a man who is quiet, and yet, not quiet, if I may offer a riddle."
Twitchy and sly, Professor Dorr is given to spasms of self-satisfied
laughter and flights of poetry, in particular, by Edgar Allen Poe (a
favorite being "To Helen," wherein the Professor adopts the
yearning, melodramatic pose of "The weary, wayworn wanderer,"
endeavoring to impress his hostess with his bookishness).
Based on the 1955 Ealing Studios
movie of the same name, The Ladykillers sets up a contest
between earthly cunning and spirited faith, where the loser has no
idea that he's losing, even as it's happening. At first, The
Ladykillers looks to be the sort of antic, violent comedy for
which the Coens are renowned, even beloved. Dorr's scheme is
outwardly straightforward: he tells Marva that his decidedly odd
crew is a Renaissance music ensemble in need of rehearsal space. Her
root cellar, he exults, is "more than perfect." In truth, the crew
(assembled by means of a "Help Wanted" ad in the local paper, plans
to rob the collection room of a riverboat gambling establishment by
tunneling from the cellar to what Dorr terms "repositories of free
lucre."
Each team member is assigned a
specific task, and each is potentially offensive in his own way,
especially with regard to their decorous landlady. Casino
maintenance worker Gawain MacSam (Marlon Wayans) can't stop himself
from cursing in her Christian home; the General (Tzi Ma)
chain-smokes; demolitions expert Garth Pancake (J.K. Simmons) tends
to bluster and set off explosions inadvertently; and the
tunnel-digging muscle, Lump (Ryan Hurst) sweats and grunts, unable
to put sentences together. (An erstwhile football player, Lump's
dismissal from his last team is revealed in spastic flashback, shot
from inside the kid's helmet as he's conked in the head: thunk.)
Predictably, these assorted
wannabes fight among themselves, jockeying for positions and shares.
Alone among the "merry band of brothers," Pancake has a sweetheart,
Mountain Girl (the resourceful Diane Delano, who deserves better
than this one-note role). Pancake reports that they met at a weekend
seminar for Irritable Bowel Syndrome sufferers, a plot point that
introduces a series of farty, uncontrollable body gags (when Pancake
refers to his condition as "IBS," Gawain is befuddled: "You be
what?"). While The Ladykillers is at least partly about
immoderation and self-interest, this bit of metaphor is, in a word,
unoriginal.
It's hard to say who is the most
flamboyant, though Dorr, being the group's pompous, self-selected
spokesman, has most opportunity to exhibit his preposterous
mannerisms. Of the many self-involved individuals who populate Joel
and Ethan Coen's movies, Dorr ranks among the most precious and
least sympathetic. This has to do with Hanks' mustering of a notably
obnoxious affect, as well as Dorr's opposition to Marva, who remains
indomitable and sensible even as Dorr presumes his own superiority.
Much as Dorr tries to limit the
interactions between Marva and the men, a curiously complex
relationship develops between Marva and Gawain. This despite the
film's concerted efforts to reduce it to slapstick, as in the
currently rotating promotional clip, when Marva slaps Gawain silly
for using foul language in her Christian home. Again, it's a simple
gag, premised on stereotypes, without challenge. "Youth ain't no
excuse for nothing," she asserts, even as Gawain begins to lose hold
of his rebellious pose, seeing in her a version of his own mama. For
the other men, he points out, Marva is just another gullible black
lady, but to him, she represents culture, history, and personal
guilt all at once.
The Ladykillers, as Tom
Hanks has pointed out in more than one recent interview, needs a
formidable woman to counter the would-be "killers." Marva provides
appropriate resistance, even as she has to spend so much of the film
off-screen, to allow the men to go on about their hijinks. Astute in
her way ("I know mischief when I see it," she warns the sniveling
Dorr), she also sees what she needs to see in order to make sense of
the chaos around her. Marva's fist appearance in the film, back at
Sheriff Wyner's office, lays out her worldview, which is less
correct than it is convincing.
By contrast, Dorr's cynicism looks
almost disingenuous. This even though the film, like other Coen
brothers projects, assumes a somewhat condescending stance with
regard to her church ladies group, affection for her cat Pickles,
and devotion to her husband (whose portrait changes expressions, as
if judging the scoundrels who have infested his home). That she
remains a mystery to Dorr and the others -- not to mention the fact
that she's played by Hall -- grants Marva her own sort of dignity,
but the movie doesn't provide much in the way of explanation or
empathy. She's as unsubtle a character as any of the others, but
considerably less discomforting. In the age of Montel, maybe that
counts as progress. |
Directed
by:
Joel Coen
Starring:
Tom Hanks
Irma P. Hall
Marlon Wayans
J.K. Simmons
Tzi Ma
Ryan Hurst
Diane Delano
George Wallace
Jason Weaver
Written by:
William Rose
Joel Coen
Ethan Coen
Rated:
R - Restricted.
Under 17 requires
parent or adult
guardian.
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