For everyone who saw and loved In Bruges, have I got the next movie for you…The Guard. This is a fantastic piece of cinema brought to us by John Michael McDonagh, the brother of Martin McDonagh, who was writer/director of In Bruges. This is the first major film directed by John Michael McDonagh and it does not disappoint.
Set in western Ireland, The Guard begins with an aerial view of a drunk driver cruising down the highway at high speeds. Right from the start it’s easy to understand where the humor will come from – Brendan Gleeson, who also played a large role in In Bruges. The car goes out of frame, skids, squeals, and crashes in front of Gleeson’s patrol car. Oh, did I mention he’s a cop this time? Quite the role reversal. The crash wakes him – slowly – from his day dream and he pulls up to check out the scene. After rummaging through the pockets of one of the people in the car he finds a bag of drugs, which he tosses away from the body, though, not before dropping a tablet of acid for himself. Cut to introductory credits.
If this doesn’t get you off, leave the theatre and begin questioning your understanding of what’s funny. The rest of the movie is comprised of smartass remarks and brilliant dry humor.
Don Cheadle plays a straight laced, by the books, FBI agent from the States investigating a drug smuggling scheme that’s rumored to be happening in the area. These two must work together to crack an overlapping case (Cheadle’s looking for the drug lords, Gleeson’s looking for murder suspects – the same people). It’s a good buddy-cop narrative between the two and they work really well together.
I don’t want to gush too much more over this movie, just go see it. I’ll leave you with a quote that should depict a fair picture about the humor in this movie:
Gleeson: I'm Irish. Racism is part of my culture.
See this movie. Until next time folks, cheers!
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