|
Pierce Brosnan is outstanding as an international hit man falling apart at the
seams in Richard Shepard’s dark comedy "The Matador."
Brosnan, riffing on his
success playing the very well groomed and genteel "James Bond" and "Remington
Steele," stars as Julian Noble, a no-longer-noble hit man who spends his free
time getting drunk and chasing impossibly young skirts.
In Mexico he meets Danny
Wright (Greg Kinnear), an average Joe trying to land an important business deal.
Jealous of Danny’s simple life, Julian becomes friends with the Denver
suburbanite, who married his high school sweetheart, Bean (the very good Hope
Davis), but lost his young son in a terrible accident.
One day at a bullfight,
Julian tells Danny what he does for a living, but Danny doesn’t believe him -
until Julian shows him an example of his expertise. But when Julian asks Danny
to help him with his next assignment, Danny is dead-set against it, and ready to
end their brief friendship. Little does he know that he has not seen the last of
the rather unique hit man.
Writer-director Shepard, whose previous work includes
the indie films - "Oxygen," "Mercy" and "The Linguini Incident’ shows a deft
hand for offbeat comedy in "The Matador," a very funny movie with a razor-sharp
edge to it. Brosnan and Kinnear make a great duo, the latter the straight man to
the former’s reckless abandon.
Shepard keeps the laughs coming with huge titles
announcing the different locations as well as with a brilliant soundtrack
featuring songs by Tom Jones and Asia in addition to The Jam, The Killers, and
The Cramps - whose ’Garbageman’ anchors a hysterical scene involving Julian, a
can of beer, a pair of Speedos, a hotel lobby and a shark.
|