One of the best forms of humour is deadpan. Deadpan is the
ability to keep a straight face when making fun of a person or a situation. It
involves a huge amount of self control not to laugh when making a joke and is
mostly seen on stage, performed by a few good stand-up comics. When it comes to
film, deadpan requires a really good actor to be able to bring about the humour
to make his audience laugh while acting out the scene with a certain level of
seriousness. It can be extremely difficult to achieve if the right actor and
the right direction are not in place.
Marty is a writer who lacks inspiration to finish off his
masterpiece – a screenplay for a film called Seven Psychopaths. He lives with
his girlfriend Kaya who is supportive but has grown tired of his
procrastination, his drinking habit and his deadbeat friend Billy. A struggling
actor, Billy works with an elderly man named Hans to kidnap dogs in Los Angeles
and return them to their owners for a cash prize. Billy is also aiding Marty
finish his screenplay and suggests he use inspiration from real life after
reading newspaper reports on the Jack of Diamonds killer in the area. On one of
their routine kidnappings, Billy and Hans pick up a Shih Tzu unaware that it
belongs to Charlie Costello, a gangster who is known for being unpredictable
and terribly violent towards his victims. Charlie has an unnatural affinity
towards his dog and starts a bloody trail to find it. Marty is confronted by
Charlie and warned to return the dog or face his death. When Marty reveals this
to Billy, they set up for a final showdown where it’s kill or be killed.
Written and directed by Martin McDonagh, Seven Psychopaths
is about a story running within the main story of the film. There is a certain
ambiguity in the plot especially with the constant discussion of a screenplay
that the protagonist is writing. The story-in-story concept doesn’t quite work
for the film as it complicates the plot and confuses the audience. The
protagonist writing a story which interjects with his personal life and comes
from his written work into his real life leaves a few questions about the
coincidental situations he faces; an example would be where Marty writes a
story about a Quaker who slits his throat which presents itself in the form of
his best friend’s associate. The seven psychopaths in the film are not who they
seem to be. The psychopaths would presumably be from the screenplay that Marty
is writing but here again they exist both in his literary work as well as his
real life.
While Colin Farrell plays the lead role and provides a
level-headed personality to his character, he ends up being a balance as
opposed to Sam Rockwell’s portrayal of the zany accomplice who creates more
problems than he solves. Christopher Walken is entrusted with providing the
deadpan humour that he is capable of and it does come across in the film at
times, but the sensitive side of his character takes away from the humour and
makes the line between seriousness and deadpan difficult to comprehend. Woody
Harrelson as the antagonist does a decent job as a hard man with a sensitive
side of his own but struggles with bringing the comedy to the film.
The humour doesn’t come across in the film perfectly. There
are instances when it does play well as a comedy but not at all times.
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