"Six Shooter" is the debut written/directed film by playwright Martin McDonagh and now I want to see more of his work.
This film is suffused with death, human and animal; we see or hear about intentional deaths - murder and suicide--, natural deaths --by illness or mysterious causes, accidental deaths, and maybe a few I missed in passing.
Each character deals with death in a different way, from the psychotic to tearful grief to quiet suffering to violent reactions, and the actors portray each fully.
While Brendan Gleeson is the central widower trying to make sense of all these observations of death for his own coping mechanisms, the film is stolen by a motormouth Rúaidhrí Conroy as the most annoying guy to ever be on public transport. He non-stop goes from cheerful to entertaining to manipulative to scary and beyond.
While it does go a bit over the top, the cinematography and settings always ground it in grim reality, with a brief excursion into magic realism.
The Irish scenery outside the railway car windows does look very pretty, in contrast to what's going on inside.
I viewed this film as part of a commercial screening of Oscar nominated shorts.
This film is suffused with death, human and animal; we see or hear about intentional deaths - murder and suicide--, natural deaths --by illness or mysterious causes, accidental deaths, and maybe a few I missed in passing.
Each character deals with death in a different way, from the psychotic to tearful grief to quiet suffering to violent reactions, and the actors portray each fully.
While Brendan Gleeson is the central widower trying to make sense of all these observations of death for his own coping mechanisms, the film is stolen by a motormouth Rúaidhrí Conroy as the most annoying guy to ever be on public transport. He non-stop goes from cheerful to entertaining to manipulative to scary and beyond.
While it does go a bit over the top, the cinematography and settings always ground it in grim reality, with a brief excursion into magic realism.
The Irish scenery outside the railway car windows does look very pretty, in contrast to what's going on inside.
I viewed this film as part of a commercial screening of Oscar nominated shorts.