| From Badlands to Natural Born Killers, lovers-on-the-run flicks take pulp-fiction narratives for romantic rides across America, the sweep and the drama of the scenery matching the magnitude of the heroes’ emotions - and their crimes. The genius of Kill List director Ben Wheatley’s third film, a parochial black comedy based on a screenplay by lead actors Steve Oram and Alice Lowe, is that it takes all this cultural baggage and transports it, by caravan, to Redditch. The settings more than match, as the pair explore Little England in all its pretty pettiness, from Castleton’s Blue John Cavern to Keswick’s Pencil Museum. Even their star-crossed love is constantly undercut by their deadpan patter, not to mention Tina’s penchant for pot pourri and crotchless (but crocheted) knickers When she envisages them dying together in the name of romance, Chris’s response is characteristically practical/Partridge-esque. “Going to salsa's romantic,” he says. “We could try that first.” Don't write in, but the Midlands accents help here: unpretentious and unexpected, they bring to mind Shane Meadows’ early wor k (which this strongly recalls) and undercut the characters' more extreme pronouncements. “He's ruined the tram museum for me now,” huffs Chris of his first victim, while Tina’s attempt to talk dirty results in: “He said he wanted to shit in my hand and make me use it as a brown lipstick!” One scene ends with a dog eating sick - you don’t see that in True Romance. Another, in Keswick Pencil Museum, leaves you unsure whether to laugh or cry. It may peter out a little towards the end, as all road movies must, but for the most part this is a staycation to cherish. Sightseers News and Features |
11/30/12
Sightseers
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment