Killing Them Softly (18)

Film

Action and adventure

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Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5

User ratings:

<strong>Rating: </strong>3/5
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Time Out says

Wed Apr 18 2012

This adaptation of George V Higgins’s 1970s crime novel ‘Cogan’s Trade’ drags the book’s down-and-dirty story of poker games, petty criminals and the mob forward to 2008. But it keeps that decade’s crumbling, end-of-the-world look in its near-apocalyptic New Orleans setting and its commitment to serious, entertaining American cinema. It also pulls off the clever trick of operating as a gangster movie – these mobsters have missions to complete and people to kill – while at the same time sarkily undermining these same folk, attributing to them a heavy dose of incompetence.

The story finds fish swimming with sharks. Two penniless young crims, Frankie (Scoot McNairy) and Russell (Ben Mendelsohn), shoot up a backroom poker game run by Markie (Ray Liotta). As quick as you can say ‘naive’, they have a cool, calm mob fixer, Jackie (Brad Pitt), on their tail, who hires an assassin, Mickey (James Gandolfini), to do his dirty work; Mickey’s handler is a backroom suit, Driver (Richard Jenkins).

It’s all defiantly male, and the only woman to open her mouth is a prostitute. But ‘Killing Them Softly’ is also pleasingly anti-macho in presenting the world of gangsters as a chaotic shit-show forever undermined by human fallibility. The film’s occasional bursts of violence are tempered by such moments as a character sobbing and vomiting after a beating. Another character’s marriage crisis and hard drinking make him criminally impotent.

Writer-director Andrew Dominik (‘The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford’, ‘Chopper’) lays it on a little thick, both the state-of-the-nation nods, with ample TV clips of Barack Obama and George W Bush playing in the background, and the idea that this grimy noir is a metaphor for sickness and stupidity in the financial sector. But, those niggles aside, ‘Killing Them Softly’ is a cracking piece of storytelling with a restrained balance of laid-back chat and canny visual outbursts – and it has a delicious thread of gallows humour running through it.

Dominik plays his hand as a stylist just enough, memorably in a scene where a character is trying to talk through a fog of heroin, and another in which a man is assassinated in super-slo-mo. It’s also a terrific actors’ movie, with everyone on screen putting in some of their best work, from Mendelsohn’s cocky and comic petty slimeball act to Gandolfini’s turn as a past-it, booze-soaked killer with a sharp tongue. Massively pleasurable and just smart enough.

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Release details

Rated:

18

UK release:

Fri Sep 21 2012

Duration:

97 mins

Cast and crew

Director:

Andrew Dominik

Screenwriter:

Andrew Dominik

Cast:

Brad Pitt, Ray Liotta, Richard Jenkins, James Gandolfini

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 3/5 (27 ratings)
  • Ignoring the fact that the first 20 min feels like a read through, this is good stuff. Oh, nothing to get excited about but nice all the same. NICE LEATHER on Pitt too 7/10

    scrumpyjack Tue Oct 2 2012
    Rated as: 3/5
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  • A slow but a very intelligent film about the mob. Just shows how even the mob are suffering during the economic down turn.

    Al Tue Oct 2 2012
    Rated as: 4/5
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  • Expected this Brad Pitt film to be at least bearable, maybe even good.... It wasn't

    Kesi Mon Oct 1 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • Rubbish. Boring. Slow. Three words that sum up this film perfectly. I have never seen so many people leave a film prior to the end. Do not waste your time. Ps. You can say it's art but you arty types can lay a loo roll on a table and claim it's art. Saying that, a loo roll on a table would be more entertaining.

    FilmBuff Sat Sep 29 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • Too much talking and not enough doing sums up this film. Set in New Orleans? How can you tell? It could be set anywhere as the camera hardly ventures outside. Though the George V Higgins book is all dialogue too, this doesn't translate very well. Nice to hear Johnny Cash on the soundtrack though.

    JERMAINE Fri Sep 28 2012
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • The best film since Pulp Fiction: thrillingly gritty, funny, poignant, clever, and most importantly, real, as art always is. Audaciously, recklessly, real.

    Breege Burke Fri Sep 28 2012
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Some good moments, but the pacing was wrong and many long dialogue scenes added nothing to the story. Could have been great. Merely okay in bits.

    Jon Rees Thu Sep 27 2012
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • By far the worst Brad Pitt Movie, walked out halfway, so many others also walked out, very boring and slow!

    Movie lover Wed Sep 26 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • What an utterly pointless film.

    Kingston Wed Sep 26 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • A fine gangster film, but not in the mode of Scorsese or Tarantino. The pace here is deliberately languid as we are forced to see the lives of a succession of hopeless characters through a microscope, although we would probably much rather not to. The juxtaposition of gangster straight talk with Obama's inspirational speeches work as dramatic chiaroscuro. Good to see Brad Pitt's stamp as producer in the credits. For a man who not so long ago called himself purely 'an entertainer' this film surely represents a departure.

    Stephen. Wed Sep 26 2012
    Rated as: 4/5
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