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Lying
Low
Holed
up hitmen await their fate
BY
MOLLY TEMPLETON
IN
BRUGES: Written and directed by Martin McDonagh. Cinematography,
Eigil Bryld. Music, Carter Burwell. Starring Colin Farrell, Brendan
Gleeson, Ralph Fiennes, Clémence Poésy, Jordan Prentice
and Jérémie Rénier. Focus Features, 2008. R. 107
minutes. 
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| Brendan
Gleeson and Colin Farrell in In Bruges |
There's charm to be found in playwright (and short-film
Oscar winner) Martin McDonagh's In Bruges. But it's not the
charm you'll be expecting if you've been to the movies in the last
few months and have been battered by the film's loud, madcap trailer.
It's not the first time a trailer has misrepresented its film, and
it certainly won't be the last, but here it seems particularly disconcerting.
A joke-laden, quirky shoot-out, In Bruges is not. But in
all fairness, it's probably a bit harder to sell a dark comedy that's
also a touch sweet and philosophical in its consideration of what
might be enough to make a hitman want to take himself out.
As that depressed, angst-ridden hitman, Ray, Colin
Farrell hunches himself into a heavy overcoat, his thick eyebrows
forming a tent atop his worried, boyish face. Other characters refer
to him as the kid, and he certainly seems like one as he slouches
through the Belgian town of Bruges, a stunning, quaint place his
colleague Ken (Brendan Gleeson) is happy to traipse around, guidebook
in hand. Ken and Ray are in Bruges because their boss, Harry (a
dry, steely Ralph Fiennes), has sent them there following a screwy
hit. They are to hang out in a lovely family-run hotel, poke around
and be available when Harry calls for them. But with the competing
lures of culture and sights (for Ken) and a pretty girl and the
pub (for Ray) out there, staying in and waiting for a phone call
is rather difficult.
In Bruges is a film in love with its setting,
with the beautiful old buildings and looming churches and dark canals
of Bruges, dripping with fog or brightly lit by a film crew shooting
a surreal movie within the movie. It's on this strange set that
Ray meets Chloë (Clémence Poésy), gorgeous and slightly
mysterious. Against the film's solid threesome of recognizable male
leads, the sweet-faced but regal Poésy (Harry Potter and
the Goblet of Fire) is a surprise and a standout. At dinner
with Ray, who seems incapable of not saying the first thing to come
into his mind, no matter how offensive, she holds her own and then
some, mischievous sparks in her wide eyes.
Brendan Gleeson (speaking of actors from Harry
Potter; and hey, look, there's Lord Voldemort!) is an earthy,
paternal presence as Ray's semi-mentor; he brings gravity to the
film when it turns in the direction of a smart-mouthed Guy Ritchie
flick. McDonagh (whose plays include The Pillowman) sets
his film's strengths in the darker parts of its dialogue; sometimes,
the jokes seem to be still waiting on their punchlines, though that
gives many scenes an appropriately off-kilter feel. But nothing
about In Bruges would be particularly memorable or interesting
were it not for the wounded Ray. He's snotty and rude, brash and
violent, and yet he's so ruined by the hit that landed him in Bruges
in the first place that he becomes sympathetic as he wrestles with
notions of sin and salvation, heaven and hell (a Hieronymus Bosch
exhibit gives a slightly heavyhanded kick to Ray's agonizing). He's
an ass, the film lets the character remind us over and over again,
but does he deserve to die for that — or for a deadly mistake?
Harry's strict principles aside, that's about as thoughtful as In
Bruges gets. Never mind how Ray became a hitman in the first
place; it's how he agonizes his way into not being one that, for
this diverting moment, matters.
In
Bruges opens Friday at the Bijou.
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