Year: 2005
Director: Shane Black
Cast: Robert Downey Jr., Val
Kilmer, Michelle Monaghan
Run
Time: 1
hour 43 minutes
MPAA
Rating: R
It's
a testament to the high quality of Kiss
Kiss Bang Bang that I went in expecting to hate it, but was forced to
make a dramatic turnaround. To be fair, I expected to hate it because I was
being dumb and confused two titles together so I thought my dad was making us
watch Lock, Stock, and Two
Smoking Barrels. But nevertheless, this film grips you from the moment it
begins to the moment it ends, a near perfect neo-noir.
Kiss
Kiss Bang Bang tells the story of one Harry Lockhart
(Robert Downey Jr.), a small time thief who, when on the run from the cops,
accidentally barges into a Hollywood audition room and steals the show. When he
is flown out to LA for a screen test, he meets a childhood friend, Harmony
(Michelle Monaghan), who moved to the city years ago to try and become an
actress.
After
riding along with a sarcastic and suave detective named Gay Perry (Val Kilmer)
to train for his role, he manages to convince harmony that he is a private eye.
Much to his chagrin, Harmony thinks she's in luck because she's in desperate
need of investigating her sister's recent death - an apparent suicide, but
Harmony has serious doubts.
Working
alongside Gay Perry, Harry begins to unravel a web of crime, deceit, and murder
that spreads throughout the city like a particularly violent and bloody case of
chlamydia. I shan't get into the plot specifics here, but it is a twisting path
that Harry walks down, a thoroughly modern murder mystery packed to the brim
with influences from the very best noir cinema and literature.
On
top of all that is a highly unexpected sprinkling of structural humor. The
entire conceit of Kiss Kiss
Bang Bang is that it is a movie being presented to the audience by
Harry himself. It's overwhelmingly meta and it's spectacular. Meta movies and I
are like Taylor Swift and boys. Most of the time they're dumb but I love them
anyway.
It
is with this immense joy for the craft that I can announce that Kiss Kiss Bang Bang is a
truly fantastic example of the form. An important thematic thread that runs
throughout the film is the divide between fiction and reality, present in the
Hollywood setting and the parallels between the film's plot and the in-universe
series of pulp crime novels.
Under
extremely microscopic analysis, the true intent of the concept becomes a little
dodgy, but it's too hilarious and integral to the tone and mood of the movie to
affect enjoyment in any important way. Prolific action screenwriter Shane
Black, in his directorial debut, serves up a sardonic world filled with wit and
sparkle (and casual gore that wouldn't be out of place in a horror film) and
the meta humor - largely applied through narration - is just the icing on the
cake.
Or the bandage on the... hand? I didn't get much sleep last night.
The
entire cast is impressive for a genre film this slick, but the MVP without a
doubt is Robert Downey Jr. Still scrabbling to find a foothold in the business
after his descent into drug abuse, this hungry young actor had something to
prove. And boy did he. Harry Lockhart is equal parts bitter sarcasm and
whimpering puppy dog, a man caught somewhere between his id and his heroic perception
of himself.
This
is the role than won him Iron
Man and it shows. He is tongue in cheek and pithy and lovely and also
a sublime idiot. Harry is a man struggling to tamp down on his awkward impulses
because the ones that slip out get him deeper and deeper in the muck. His
cockiness and his deeply flawed psyche are a playground for the talented
Downey, who creates a masterpiece of psychology perfectly conjoined with the
heightened tone of the film.
So much so that even relatively mundane actions for the genre become hilarious.
I
am perhaps not as well-suited to discuss the ins and out of the action genre as
my friend Zach Nix, who indeed runs a blog about the very topic. So I
won't make a fool of myself by digging into Kiss
Kiss Bang Bang any further
than I need to other than to sing its manifold praises.
But
I will close out by saying that this film is notable for being the first action
film to depict a gay character in a protagonist role, which is a tremendously
important development in cinema. Kiss
Kiss Bang Bang is remarkably progressive, so much so that Google lists the movie under its "LGBT
Films" category, which is patently ridiculous (and, in fact, indicative of
a deeper prejudice at work - just because a film has a gay character doesn't
mean that it is a gay film. You wouldn't label Reservoir Dogs "Crime/Action/Hetero" #socialjusticebrennan) but not altogether unearned.
All
in all, this is a film with tremendous value, both entertainment-wise and
thematically. It tells a riveting mystery story with a punchy upbeat tone and
is absolutely a gem of both the genre and the decade. Always worth a watch.
TL;DR: Kiss Kiss Bang Bang is a hilarious and
sharp mystery movie featuring a top notch performance by Robert Downey Jr.
Rating: 9/10
Word Count: 906
Hell Yes, I really enjoyed this... you can see a lot of Shane Black's skills in this and in his directing of Iron Man III... nice post and solid review.
ReplyDeleteJeremy [Retro]
There's no earthly way of knowing.
Which direction we are going!
[Being-Retro]
Yeah, as an action fan Shane Black is one of my heroes of action cinema! His screenplays are so awesome and hilarious, he should be writing every action film. Love this movie, it is honestly one of the funniest and most creative mysteries I have ever seen all in one film. And Robert Downey is so good in it too! I agree with the 9/10 rating too!
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