2011 drama
Rating: 16/20 (Jen: 12/20)
Plot: A kid with financial troubles hires the titular creep to get rid of his mother in order to share some insurance money.
After seeing his work in this and Bernie, I think I'm ready to take Matthew McConaughey more seriously. In a way, I don't want to because I have to look up his name every time I have to spell it and then, after I've spelled it, look it up a second and a third time to make sure that I've spelled it correctly. And I can't type his name without thinking of oppressive pectorals. But I'm impressed with what he does here, taking this strange character and nailing it with just the perfect amount of quiet. This a natural fit for McConaughey and his nipples, and it's such a dark character that it makes you wonder how he ever fit in the skin of those characters in all those romantic comedies. Of course, he's not the only dark character here. They're all sinners in one way or another. They're such terrible human beings that I don't think I could have argued with anything that might happen to them by the time the credits began rolling. Sinners and unbelievably dumb, so dumb that I'm willing to bet it would be a turn off for a lot of viewers. More than likely, the plot could do that all by itself. The weirdness in this one really creeps up on you. Sure there's a constant thunderstorm in this Texas town, an obnoxious doggy, an early surreal sequence that suggests thoughts of incest, and all these trailer park details, but the massive creepiness really sneaks up on the viewer during an incredibly intense and tension-packed final twenty minutes or so. Jen and I watched this movie late on a week night, and we both had trouble going right to sleep after it was all over, and I think I have to credit writer Tracy Letts (I am, by the way, surprised that a woman wrote this thing), director William Friedkin, and the cast for crafting this little nightmare. In fact, I suspect that they all got together just to figure out a way to make us lose sleep, and if that was truly their ultimate goal, they were successful. However, it's not all doom and gloom with Killer Joe as there is tons of masterful black comedy. The scene that I imagine most people will always remember after seeing this is one of those that will make you not be able to think of an everyday object, in this case a chicken leg, the same way again. And the way McConaughey says one word here--"Leg"--is just perfect, such simple genius. That's right--I just used "McConaughey" and "genius" in the same sentence.
This trailer trash jolts, makes you more than a little uneasy. If that sounds like a good reason to watch a movie to you, you'll get something out of this.
2 comments:
We started to watch this a week or two ago, but Rebecca made me turn it off. She found it pointlessly sadistic, and I could definitely see where she was coming from. I'm going to finish it soon myself so I can see those final twenty minutes, though.
You're right, this is not the kind of thing a woman would write - Tracy Letts is a man. I picture a Boy Named Sue kind of thing, but instead of his father he turned his resentment on the opposite sex. He and Friedkin did great work together in Bug, though - I friggin' love that movie.
Also, I'm really looking forward to seeing McCoganahaney... McCaugheyhey... you-know-who in Mud. I loved Take Shelter, which starred Michael Shannon, who starred in Bug, and Mud's the follow-up. Which brings this comment full circle, I think.
Heh. Every once in a while, I'll throw out a piece of misinformation intentionally, but assuming Tracy Letts was female was just pure laziness on my part. Whoops.
I've not seen 'Bug'...I'll watch that to make up for the mistake.
"Pointlessly sadistic"...when/if you finish this, you'll have to let me know if you found a point in the whole thing.
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