Premium
This is an archive article published on March 17, 2011

In Bruges

After a hit, Ray Farrell and Ken Gleeson are sent away by the man who hired them for the job, to hide out in Bruges.

.

Cast: Colin Farrell, Ralph Fiennes, Brendan Gleeson

Director: Martin McDonagh

After a hit, Ray Farrell and Ken Gleeson are sent away by the man who hired them for the job, to hide out in Bruges. That8217;s in Belgium, and the choice of the place is as much a surprise for the two Irishmen.

However, the reason for the choice of the city soon becomes evident. Bruges is 8220;the most well-preserved medieval city in Belgium8221;. Religious symbols fill the town, as do themes of purgatory and hell wherever they look. Plus, the time is Christmas.

Ken is an avid sightseer, while Ray has to be dragged to the monuments, including a church holding what is said to be Christ8217;s blood. It may have something to do with the fact that Ray accidentally shot a young boy apologising in church while on his first job. The guilty is driving him crazy and Bruges doesn8217;t let him forget it.

There is repeated emphasis on 8220;the fairytale nature of the city8221; and In Bruges ends on an ambiguous note of what that means for the two hired killers. Is it the promise of heaven, or the hint of hell, before Judgment Day?

Fiennes forms the third half of the triangle, as a loving family man who orders the hits. However, even he draws a line, and for him, killing children is absolutely unacceptable.

Mixing humour, quirkiness and pathos, In Bruges spins a story showing the capacity to both surprise and enthrall. A large credit for that goes to Farrell, Fiennes, Gleeson and its two female leads. An interesting and talented mix, they never let down the film8217;s ambitions.

shalini.langerexpressindia.com

 

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement