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Movie Reviews
Author: Victoria Alexander Jul 12, 2007 - 7:10:57 PM |
Stars: Matthew Macfadyen, Rupert Graves, Andy Nyman, Daisy Donovan, Peter Egan, Ewan Bremner. Directed by: Frank Oz Reviewed by Victoria Alexander, Zboneman.com Grade: B At first, "Death"
appears to be a sedate British comedy. Children and friends have
gathered at a gorgeous manor house for the wake. In charge of the
affair is Daniel (Matthew Macfadyen), son of the deceased. He wants to
be an author like his famous brother Robert (Rupert Graves), but still
lives with his now widowed mother in the family home with his wife,
Jane (Keeley Hawes). She wants them to move to the city and buy a flat
of their own. Sandra (Jane Asher), Daniel's mother, is hysterical with
grief but delighted to see Robert, who has just flown in from New York
City. The mourners gather at the house. Cousin Martha (Daisy
Donovan) brings her boyfriend, Simon (Alan Tudyk), who is disliked for
no good reason by her father, Victor (Peter Egan). Martha and Simon
have stopped by to pick up her brother Troy (Kris Marshall), who has
just cooked up a fancy mix of LSD, Ketamine and DMT. Martha gives Simon
one of the pills believing it is a valium. Daniel's friends
Howard (Andy Nyman) and Justin (Ewen Bremner) pick up cranky Uncle
Alfie (Peter Vaughan). Martha once had a drunken fling with Justin and
he thinks he is in love with her. Things go along as well as can be
expected until a tiny man no one knows, Peter (Peter Dinklage), turns
up. As Simon starts hallucinating and causes a major disruption
that temporarily halts the proceedings, Troy loses the bottle of pills. Peter
tells Daniel that he has some information and needs to see him in
private. What he tells Daniel sets off a chain of events that are quite
drastic and funny. This comedy could only be set in Britain where
decorum is the norm. Director Frank Oz stays out of the way allowing
the British cast (except Alan Tudyk and Dinklage) to slowly develop
their characters. In fact, this is the only Oz comedy I ever liked. The
pace picks up once Dinklage arrives. I have a new appreciation of
Dinklage. He walks off with the movie. I'm not going to reveal the
twist that sends this comedy into slapstick or what happens when Uncle
Alfie needs to use the "facilities" – I covered my eyes.




