The
Ladykillers
(2004)
Rated R
Starring: Tom Hanks, Marlon Wayans, and
Irma P. Hall
Rating:

out
of

|
The Coen Brothers are usually pretty reliable in bringing interesting
material to the screen. The Man Who Wasn't There, Fargo, Raising
Arizona,
O, Brother Where Art Thou? and Barton Fink are some of their better outings.
The Big Lebowski and, unfortunately, The Ladykillers are among their few
misfires.
The
Ladykillers concerns Professor G. H. Dorr (Tom Hanks) and his rag-tag
ensemble of criminal specialists who plan to rob a riverboat casino of
a few million dollars by tunneling through Marva Munson's (Irma P. Hall)
root cellar into the counting room of the casino.
The plan, which is to make
it look as if the money has just disappeared from the casino, begins
with the professor renting a room from Marva.
Marva, a religious old widow with a set routine, must be handled carefully
if the plan is to go off without a hitch. The criminals, who include Garth
Pancake (J. K. Simmons), a demolitions expert; Gawain MacSam (Marlon Wayans),
the inside man at the casino; and The General (Tzi Ma), a tunneling expert
from "French-Indo China" (i.e. Vietnam), are supposed to be
musicians in a renaissance troupe although none of them can play a note.
They cover the sounds of their tunneling with a boom box that plays Mozart.
The movie wanders from high-concept comedy to low-brow humor virtually
with every scene change. It never develops a rhythm because it tries to
be odd seemingly for the sake of being odd and not because the Coens wants
to tell their story with any conviction. The characters are all caricatures
and, while that might be forgivable in a comedy, they're not people that
are easy to sympathize with so what's the point? We're given no back-story
or information about any of them aside from one establishing scenario
as each is introduced.
There are a few funny bits, including a few mishaps involving Mr. Pancake
and his irritable bowel syndrome and Professor Dorr's long-winded explanations
of the goings-on, but they're only enough to keep the movie from being
painfully uninteresting.
If this weren't an update of a 1955 comedy of the same name, starring
Alec Guinness and Peter Sellers, I'd be concerned that the Coens might
be losing their touch. Here, I think, the material restricts them and,
while it's an admirable attempt at an ensemble comedy, it just falls flat. Trivia: There
are several notable cameos in the film, including Bruce Campbell and
Eddie Murphy. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |