YOU KILL ME                                                                      

Making Him Want to Be a Better Hit Man: An Alcoholic Killer's Angst at Shooting Blanks
(The Whole Nine Millimeter Yards)

The Popcorn Reel Movie Review: "You Kill Me"

By Omar P.L. Moore/June 22, 2007




Frankly, and to the (gun) point: Ben Kingsley as Frank Falencyk in "You Kill Me", John Dahl's romantic comedy, which opened today.  (Photos: IFC Films)

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Ben Kingsley's Don Logan character from "Sexy Beast" has now years later morphed into an alcoholic shell of his former self, an inhibited, irritated hit man named Frank Falencyk, who does his best to excommunicate himself from his Polish crime family by falling asleep at the wheel in a crucial situation.  The Buffalo, New York-based Polish crime boss Roman Krzeminski (Philip Baker Hall) banishes him to San Francisco on a sabbatical of sorts, crimping this career criminal's style, in an effort to send him to rehab.  Dave (Bill Pullman) is lurking around every corner of the Northern California city to ensure that the hit man-in-black complies with the boss's wishes. 

In San Francisco, Frank stumbles into an AA clinic and meets Tom (Luke Wilson) a gay alcoholic who befriends Frank.  They are quite a pair, and things become even more interesting when Laurel (Tea Leoni) enters the fray, courtesy of Frank's new occupation as a funeral worker who prepares bodies (presumably those he hasn't killed) for burial.  Laurel has just experienced loss, and she is as vacant a person before losing her father -- if not more so -- than after.  John Dahl's "You Kill Me", which opened today in the U.S. and Canada in limited release, is inventive, funny and tells a great story about two people in Laurel and Frank who find themselves drifting closer together like the fog that comes in off the San Francisco Bay.

The most impressive thing about Mr. Dahl's latest film is the intimacy and richness of the interactions between the two interesting lead characters Frank and Laurel.  Their growth as very disparate beings is well-rendered.  Lonely souls, they are looking for something, and initially it is not each other.  But they meet and evolve, and soon romance takes over.  Both characters in the tight screenplay by Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely are superbly drawn and not an ounce of credibility is lacking.  Between Laurel's vacancy and Frank's anti-social killing drink-meister, they make a couple that is certainly unique.  Ben Kingsley and Tea Leoni are an admirable acting duo and the bulk of their performances emerge from quiet moments and discovery of opportunity, instead of showy scenery-chewing (which is what Kingsley's Don Logan does in "Sexy Beast".)  Most of the time in "You Kill Me" both actors, especially Kingsley, seem to speak with their eyes more than with anything else.  In the final analysis, Frank and Laurel actually make a beautiful couple and Mr. Dahl's direction of them and the larger cast is quiet and discreet, and he displays a wicked sense of humor via his characters and their scenarios. 

The noir-ish elements of Mr. Dahl's past work ("Red Rock West" and the classic "The Last Seduction") are somewhat muted here, with comedy and intimacy becoming more predominant and potent.  The supporting cast is strong, with Dennis Farina as Edward O'Leary, Roman's rival in the crime game.  Luke Wilson provides laughs as the fellow alcoholic in San Francisco.  The hit man genre is something that has been made funnier and more touching, especially with Mr. Dahl's latest film, and "You Kill Me" is all the more romantic a comedy because of it.  Where "The Whole Nine Yards" and its extra-yard sequel were gimmicky and loopy, there is a serious and off-the-beaten path to "You Kill Me" that renders it human and perfectly awkward and most of all, entertaining.


Tea Leoni as Laurel in John Dahl's "You Kill Me". 

"You Kill Me" is rated R by the Motion Picture Association of America for language and some violence.  The film's duration is one hour and 32 minutes.


Related stories:

Popcorn Reel Automatic Dialogue Replacement -- Tea Leoni excerpt interview with The Popcorn Reel /Cinematical.com MP3 wav file
(2:09)
 

The Popcorn Reel/Cinematical.com Interview of Tea Leoni and John Dahl
 


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