sovay: (Default)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2007-05-06 02:29 am

Me and my partner, we work on the run

My computer is still dead. I am still on borrowed internet. Most of the files I care about have been salvaged and transferred. This could have been a lot worse.

Change of subject. On the strength of Shaun of the Dead, my father and I went to see Hot Fuzz tonight. It was incredibly charming, in a sort of explosive, bullet-riddled, swan-festooned way. The film starts out with the same low-key, deadpan plausibility as Shaun, introducing our protagonist as a London sergeant so dedicated and efficient he's embarrassing the rest of the service—and so precise and humorless in the performance of his duty that, reassigned to the sleepily eccentric village of Sandford, where he all but closes down the pub on his first night in town and the worst crime he can find to crack down on the next day is a spot of unauthorized hedge-clipping, he looks like the second coming of Neil Howie. His avuncular new superior advises him to loosen up, he's not in the big city anymore, is he? His new partner has learned everything he wants to know about police work from American buddy-cop flicks, the kind whose heroes regularly fire two guns while flying sideways through the air. The rest of the local constabulary isn't worth describing as such. And everyone smiles and knows everyone, the new arrival included, by name. The frustated fish out of water, the cheerily impenetrable villagers, the dark secrets underneath the pastoral trimmings—this is familiar territory, the land of the quirky country mystery. Which presently morphs, through a series of plot swings that make more or less sense at the time, into the mad love child of The Prisoner and High Plains Drifter. No, really. As the allusions and homages pile up, the weirdness escalates. And perhaps because I am unfamiliar with the genre, I did find that they piled up; I didn't feel the need to watch quite as many shootouts as the finale seemed to think I did. (And my God, has Edward Woodward ever made a movie where his character survives to the credits? Because I haven't seen it yet . . .) But even when the film loses all grip on reality, it somehow doesn't become the kind of silliness that bores. And its soundtrack contains the Kinks' "The Village Green Preservation Society," which I have to applaud. In short, never mind the hedgehogs or the floating mines, I will happily watch whatever Simon Pegg and Nick Frost do next, and I hope that will be soon. It's nice to have a new addiction.

[identity profile] alankria.livejournal.com 2007-05-06 08:51 am (UTC)(link)
I thought that film was absolutely hilarious. =D Especially the West Country accents, and especially the following exchange: [paraphrased]
"I'm with my mother and my sister."
"Who are they?"
"They're the same."

[identity profile] setsuled.livejournal.com 2007-05-06 09:41 am (UTC)(link)
I will happily watch whatever Simon Pegg and Nick Frost do next, and I hope that will be soon. It's nice to have a new addiction.

I need to see Hot Fuzz. Have you seen Don't (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7W_sMFoyMs)?

[identity profile] ap-aelfwine.livejournal.com 2007-05-06 06:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks! I've been wondering if that film was worth the seeing. Sounds as if I'll have to try and catch it.

The stolid sergeant partnered with the bloke who's seen too many American cop flicks bit puts me in mind of Robert Rankin's _Raiders of the Lost Car Park_, slightly.

[identity profile] ap-aelfwine.livejournal.com 2007-05-07 06:17 pm (UTC)(link)
A very silly novel, the dramatis personae of which include Hugo Rune (mage, author of the _Book of Ultimate Truths_, and reinventor of the ocarina), Cornelius Murphy (the Stuff of Epics and the natural son of the aforementioned Rune), and the King of the Faeries, Father Christmas.

Also appearing are Her Majesty the Queen (who also happens to be Queen of the Faeries and Father Christmas' estranged wife), Vain Glory, the lead singer of Gandhi's Hairdryer (the world's greatest rock band), New Age Travellers, and an army of big green things.

A minor, but nonetheless significant, subplot involves reliable Ron Sturdy, sergeant and former second in command to Inspectre Sherringford Hovis, being partnered with Constable Ken Loathsome ("hand-reared on American cop shows and donuts that go dunk in your decaffeinated").

[identity profile] rushthatspeaks.livejournal.com 2007-05-06 10:30 pm (UTC)(link)
The way you describe the setup causes me to think of Wicker Man, and that way lies the primrose path to madness...

[identity profile] ex-blue-verv849.livejournal.com 2007-05-07 03:36 am (UTC)(link)
I got that one too, very very shortly in. I've watched most of the buddy cop films, indeed, most of their Hong Kong precursors (for which I have only former roomate [livejournal.com profile] ignatius1231 to blame); there were dozens. I also caught some Prisoner vibes, but I wasn't sure. It's nice to know that someone else saw them, too.

[identity profile] ex-blue-verv849.livejournal.com 2007-05-07 01:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Actually, I won't, because, at this early hour, I can't think of any. I've actually watched very few films in adulthood, and most of those in classes, I'm starting my cinematic rehabilitation, though it's kind of a painful one.

[identity profile] stsisyphus.livejournal.com 2007-05-09 06:13 pm (UTC)(link)
...the mad love child of The Prisoner and High Plains Drifter.

Must! See! Movie! NOW!