Viking Night: Hot Fuzz

By Bruce Hall

August 11, 2015

Swans are jerks.

New at BOP:
Share & Save
Digg Button  
Print this column
The citizens of Sanford are led by a hodgepodge of eccentrics, starting with Chief Butterman and ending with oddball local entrepreneur Simon Skinner (Timothy Dalton, who absolutely owns this role), who has a habit of blurting out homicidal double entendres at peculiar times. Angel does his best to fit in with his new assignment, but discovers that his Big City Police Ways are not well appreciated by the town folk. When a suspicious combination of citizens starts to turn up missing and/or brutally murdered, Angel finds himself an outsider looking in. He finds an unlikely ally in Butterman’s oafish-but-endearing son Danny (Nick Frost), who is obsessed with 1980s action films and thinks of Angel as a role model.

Angel’s role as a sanctimonious fish out of water trying to do his job in a secretive environment is intentionally reminiscent of The Wicker Man, and it’s one of probably hundreds of such parallels gleefully sprinkled throughout the film. Action movie tropes are not skewered here so much as they’re re-enacted with panache and a knowing wink. They’re all here - the shooting into the sky scene at the end of Point Break, the John Wu double-bang-bang jumping through the air thing, and even the famous, Michael Bay’s “Three Times Around the World” money shot. Edgar Wright’s active camera work is almost a character unto itself, reminiscent of the way Sam Raimi involves the audience in the action through movement.




Advertisement



And speaking of characters, Pegg and Frost nail their respective roles as the badass veteran with the fresh faced rookie in tow. But the best part about it is that this isn’t an empty parody - it’s a real story, and the relationship between the characters isn’t just lip service, it’s the heart of the film. This gives me hope for Pegg’s efforts on the third Star Trek movie; he’s got a great eye for relationships, and understands that the best parodies are made with love, not cynicism. And by the way, did I mention that Timothy Dalton is the freaking best? I don’t say this often, but I’d watch a movie spinoff just on Simon Skinner, the oily, mustachioed game show host-like grocery mogul who clearly has mental health issues and may - or may not - be a closet psycho.

If there’s any criticism I can level against Hot Fuzz it’s that it has two endings. Right when you think it’s over, some completely unnecessary things happen, making the story about 20 minutes too long. It doesn’t kill the film - it pretty much ends the way you think it will anyway - it just feels like someone realized there was one extraneous plot thread left unaddressed, so why not add another couple of scenes? It’s annoying but not fatal. So if you have any love in your heart at all for the cheesy goodness of Lethal Weapon, Bad Boys, Point Break, or Chow Yun Fat shooting two guns at once - Hot Fuzz is just for you. Maybe...just stop after Ending #1.


Continued:       1       2

     


 
 

Need to contact us? E-mail a Box Office Prophet.
Thursday, April 25, 2024
© 2024 Box Office Prophets, a division of One Of Us, Inc.