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In Bruges [2008]

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In Bruges [2008]Starring: ~ Colin Farrell, Ralph Fiennes Brendan Gleeson
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Product Details:

   Studio: Universal Pictures UK
   Region: 2
   Number of Discs: 1
   Format: PAL,
   Rating:
   Sales Rank: 131

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Customer Reviews:

  best film of 2008 (12 November 2008)
In a year or hype and tripe at the cinema when all the sequels failed to sparkle and originality seemed dead 'In Bruge' slipped into the multiplexes, under the radar, with very little fanfare and a trailer that did it little favours. By pure accident, with nothing else on at the time I wanted, I grudgingly handed over my cash and plodded to the smallest screen Odeon had to offer. I emerged elated. Not since taking a risk on Withnail and I had I had such fun at the cinema. This was a great discovery and I vowed to spread the word. In Bruges is indeed a rare beast. Honestly I had resigned myself to never laughing throughout a film ever again until this. As horrible as the two lead characters are (two charming foul mouthed, racist, homophobic, killers) you actually grow to love them as they grow to understand themselves. This is films magic. It is so well written, acted and directed. It doesn't rush, it plods along quite happily. If Tarantino was Irish and a better Director and writer this would be the result.

  Very Funny Black Comedy (08 November 2008)
Ken (Brendan Gleeson) and Ray (Colin Farrell) play a couple of Irish hitmen hiding out in the Belgian medieval town of Bruges after a bungled contract killing in London. They are given strict instructions to wait at their hotel for angry boss Harry (Ralph Fiennes) to call with further instructions.

Although In Bruges is a 'british gangster flick' of sorts, don't let that put you off. It's certainly not just another 'Lock Stock' clone with flash camera tricks and cockney geezers, this is an original and very funny film. The dialogue is fantastic and the two leads do an excellent job as the bickering pair. Colin Farrell is suprisingly funny outside of his usual macho roles and delivers his lines brilliantly. The setting of Bruges is beautiful too and filming takes in some stunning locations. Things turn nasty when Harry turns up and there are some violent scenes but In Bruges is essentially a black comedy with some very dark, very un-PC humour (racist dwarves, prostitutes and fat tourists).

  Not Funny (02 November 2008)
I didn't like "In Bruges". It is an amoral film full of nasty,unpleasant characters who spend most of their time swearing and shooting each other . The film attempts to generate black humour out of such "hilarious" events as the murder of a small boy by an Irish hitman ,the blinding of a Belgian skinhead by the same character and making repeated jokes about midgets. There were quite a few unnecessarily bloody scenes as well. The makers of the film must have thought that all of this garbage would be rendered palatable by portraying the main characters ,played by Brendan Gleeson and Colin Farrell, as a sort of psychotic Father Ted and Dougal and shooting the film in the attractive medieval Belgian town of Bruges.Not for me it wasn't.

  Bah .... a movie or a tourist's spot ??? (29 October 2008)
Bah. A dark comedy ? Perhaps a boring story with a underemployed Farrell, but a decent cast, especially Fiennes.
In my opinion, more than a film, is a tourist's spot for a little, "insignificant" city in Belgium. In Italy there is a prize (a weekend in Bruges - ohh mygosh) linked with this DVD .... What else ?

  What a pleasant surprise (29 October 2008)
This is the second film I've been talked into seeing against my wishes (the other being Mama Mia), and what a different reaction I had. I'd seen the ads when it hit the cinema, and, quite frankly, had this down as one to miss. However, a chance trip to the shops with my boyfriend to find something to watch (with this being the best of a bad bunch) saw me unhappily trotting to the tills to part with £13 for it.

I am so glad to have been wrong.

What we have here is a pretty engrossing tale of two hit men sent to Bruges to lay low after a messy hit. The interplay between the veteran (Gleeson) and the rookie hot-head Farrell is fantastic. Farrell really does a splendid job; half tortured possible suicide attemptee, half comedy turn... and excelling in both roles. I can't really give a better explanation as I don't want to ruin the film, but do keep an eye out for his scrape with an American family, and an incident at a dinner date. Fantastic.

I can imagine the cast read through the script cracking up. I can't remember the last film that had me laughing so much at such clearly dark humour, and when was the last time you heard a line such as "you can't give a midget horse tranquillisers!" in a movie??

The storyline starts off pretty basic, and builds, twists and unfolds as the film progresses, sucking you into the plight of the two main characters.

A word about Mr Fiennes, one of the other reviewers mentioned his character being very similar to Ben Kingsley's scene-stealing "Don" in Sexy Beast. This is exactly what I thought watching it, and it is no bad thing.

So, if you like a film with a liberal sprinkling of violence, and darkly humourous, this is one for you. If you like things a little safer, stick to dross like Mama Mia.

"You've got to stick to your principles".

Indeed.

 
 


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