Jon Peters Reviews: “In Bruges DVD”

July 9, 2008 by  
Filed under Reviews

The Film (this is my original view on the film from early this year):

‘In Bruges’ is a startling fresh and a great start for Martin McDonaugh, a first-time feature film director. McDonaugh has already captured the attention of some within the film world for his Oscar award-winning short from 2005, ‘Six Shooter’. He has a great knack early here for situations and dialogue. Some have mentioned he might be the next David Mamet, but who knows, his theater work helped honed his talent for multi-layered situations which juggle comedy and drama excellently.

After a botched assassination attempt, Harry sent Ray and Ken to Bruges, Belgium to enjoy their time for a couple of weeks, while he figures things out. Ray (Colin Farrell) could careless, Bruges is a horrible place to spend time in. Ken (Brendan Gleeson), who rather likes Bruges after some sight-seeing, gets a call from Harry (Ralph Fiennes) telling him what he must do with Ray. From here decisions must be made.

It seems to be a rather simple gangster tale and really it kind of is. But that doesn’t stop McDonaugh writing to carry us deeper in each characters mind and emotions, taking us into their world, for good and for bad. Characters are slowly developed through their drama and comedic situations. McDonaugh handles the comedy subtly; he doesn’t make it apparent, this isn’t comedy like Judd Apatow. The comedy comes from the situation and it’s really up to you to find it funny. It plays like dark humor; the characters aren’t trying to be funny, it’s just that it is funny. Sharply written comedy is juxtaposed against some underlining themes of the film.

I won’t reveal spoilers, but Ray is haunted by something he done recently. Staring at a painting as he and Ken visit a Bruges museum, he takes a liking to it. The painting is filling with visions of Heaven and Hell, but the thing that catches Ray’s eyes is the people shown in Purgatory. Through all the laughter and playfulness that is Ray, he finds his purgatory and has too make a choice: let what is bothering him into Hell (for which he believes is Bruges, an ongoing joke) or face it and move on. This is where McDonaugh really shines in his writing, this juggling act of gangster comedy and conscience.

Add some dependable actors to the mix, like a Ralph Fiennes, like a Brendan Gleeson, and perhaps it’s working with fellow Irishmen, but Farrell delivers one of his better performances in a good while, the film shines. Great dialogue isn’t great because it’s been written; great dialogue is great because of line delivery from these good actors. Ken’s (Gleeson) bit about how Harry (Fiennes) personality is will have you laughing hard, as they deliver it so earnest and straight.

Before you can label anyone great, you must look over their work. While all McDonaugh has is a short (albeit one in which he has won an Oscar) and this, you can at least label him a newcomer to watch out for. While the gangster genre has gotten stale with immature, McDonaugh delivers a solid breathe of fresh air.

The DVD:

Audio/Video:Everything is has well as expected. It’s a new movie, so there’s no print damage and the sharpness is as good as a standard DVD can do now. Focus Features always does a nice job. Same with the audio as well, as dialogue is crisp and clear, with some nice bass periodically.

‘When in Bruges’: This is your standard talking heads making-of, but a welcomed addition is the thoroughness of the actors and director in discussing various elements about the location and plot themes. It runs just under 14 minutes, but without an audio commentary, this fits the bill nicely.

‘Strange Bruges’: This is a little more typical featurette, running 7 and a half minutes, with the leads discussing Bruges in general terms. Nothing major.

‘F***ing Bruges’: What an odd little feature this is. It basically cuts together all of the cussing in the film in a music video way. It’s mildly amusing but not a priority to watch.

There’s also a gag reel (eh), some deleted and extended scenes (decent but nothing major), and a ‘Boat Trip around Bruges, which is a relaxing, tourist look at the rivers and canals in the town.

  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • del.icio.us
  • Technorati
  • Google
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Fark
  • Furl

Comments

Feel free to leave a comment...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!