Dir. Roman Polanski, France/Germany/Poland/ Spain, 2011, 80 mins

Cast: Jodie Foster, Kate Winslet, Christoph Waltz, John C. Reilly

Review by Carol Allen

Set in New Yorkbut filmed in Europeby Roman Polanski, this film version of Yasmina Reza’s play The God of Carnage is a claustrophobic study of the “teeth and claws” beast that lurks beneath our supposed civilised exterior.

Two couples meet for an ostensibly sensible and grown up discussion over an incident involving their children. Nancy (Winslet) and Alan’s (Walz) son has had a bit of a set to with Penelope (Foster) and Michael’s (Reilly) little treasure, which has resulted in the latter losing a tooth. With US dentistry bills being what they are, one could understand that this might perhaps upset the parents on a financial level. Though looking at their Manhattan apartment, where the action takes place, which would definitely go on the market as “luxury”, we can assume they can afford a good dentist. Penelope in particular, who has organised the meeting, is determined to make political capital out of the incident, portraying her child as the victim and the other child as the bully.Nancyis at first conciliatory, her husband obviously there on sufferance. But after initial pleasantries are exchanged and home made fruit cobbler is offered – a delicacy to which Nancy’s very dramatic physical reaction arguably expresses her true feelings about the meeting – the gloves are off, as in ostensibly defending their children, the four characters reveal the prejudices, contradictions, stupidities and primal urges which lurk beneath their ultra civilised middle class exteriors.

Apart from the opening and closing sequences, where we see the children in the distance in Brooklyn Park, Polanski makes no attempt to open the text up from its stage origins, apart from a couple of excursions into the bathroom and the hallway outside the flat, which is as far as the visitors seem able to get before being drawn back inexorably into the next round of verbal carnage. This is a study in human behaviour trapped in an enclosed environment, not unlike the situation of Sartre’s characters trapped in the hell of each other in Huis Clos. And it’s played out beautifully by four first class actors. Foster in particular is hateful as the smug, do-gooding, ultra politically correct Penelope with her carefully honed passion for African art, and the antipathy that quickly develops between her and cynical, work obsessed businessman Alan, who is never off his blasted mobile phone, is tangible. The apparently conciliatory Nancy and amiable Michael also have their dark side, particularly when they all start swigging Michael’s secret stash of malt whisky.

The set up is admittedly somewhat artificial and indeed theatrical. But it is so well done, often so achingly funny and also uncomfortable, as we recognize ourselves in the hypocrisies of the characters that one can forgive that. Ms Reza is making a point about the human condition and she makes it sharply and elegantly. 

You May Also Like.......
Carnage – UK trailer
A showdown between two kids about eleven, in a local playground.  Swollen lips, broken teeth...  Now the parents of the  “victim” have invited the parents of the “bully” to their ...
READ MORE
We Need to Talk about Kevin (15) | Close-Up Film Review
Dir. Lynne Ramsay, UK/USA, 2011, 112 mins Cast:   Tilda Swinton, John C. Reilly, Ezra Miller Review by Carol Allen The situation in the film is created because Eva (Swinton) and Franklin (Reilly) never did ...
READ MORE
The Descendants (15) | Close-Up Film DVD Review
Dir. Alexander Payne, US, 2011, 115 mins Cast: George Clooney, Shailene Woodley, Amara Miller Review by Carol Allen Alexander Payne makes films about flawed, multi faceted and often quirky people, who are outside ...
READ MORE
Two Days in New York (15) | Close-up Film Review
Dir. Julie Delpy, Germany/France/Belgium, 2011, 96 mins Cast: Julie Delpy, Chris Rock, Alexia Landeau Review by Carol Allen   Julie Delpy is a very talented woman, who brings a sharp and wicked sense of ...
READ MORE
Beloved – Les bien-aimés (15) | Close-Up Film Review
Dir. Christophe Honoré, France/ UK/Czech Republic, 2011, 139 mins, in French/Czech/English with subtitles Cast: Catherine Deneuve, Chiara Mastroianni, Ludivine Sagnier, Review by Carol Allen   This film has a paper thin plot spread over ...
READ MORE
The Iron Lady (12A) | Close-Up Film DVD Review
Dir. Phyllida Lloyd, UK/France, 2011, 105 mins Cast: Meryl Streep, Jim Broadbent, Olivia Colman Review by Carol Allen Many of those who lived through the Thatcher era have strong feelings about the former ...
READ MORE
Albert Nobbs (15) | Close-Up Film Review
Dir. Rodrigo García, UK/Ireland, 2011, 113 mins Cast: Glenn Close, Janet McTeer, Mia Wasikowska, Review by Carol Allen   It's not giving anything away to reveal that Close in the title role plays a ...
READ MORE
African Cats (12A) | Close-Up Film Review
Dir. Keith Scholey, Alastair Fothergill, USA, 2011, 89 mins Cast: Patrick Stewart (narration) Review by Carol Allen   This film is a bit short on hard zoological information but really big on great wildlife ...
READ MORE
Dream House (15) | Close-Up Film DVD Review
Dir. Jim Sheridan, USA, 2011, 92 mins Cast: Daniel Craig, Rachel Weisz, Naomi Watts, Review by Carol Allen This film raises a number of questions, the first one being, why has such high ...
READ MORE
This Must Be the Place (15)  | Close-Up Film Review
Dir. Paolo Sorrentino, Italy/ France/Ireland, 2011, 112 mins Cast: Sean Penn, Frances McDormand, Judd Hirsch Review by Carol Allen This film is nothing if not unusual. It is bizarre, sometimes baffling, always intriguing ...
READ MORE
Carnage – UK trailer
We Need to Talk about Kevin (15) |
The Descendants (15) | Close-Up Film DVD Review
Two Days in New York (15) | Close-up
Beloved – Les bien-aimés (15) | Close-Up Film
The Iron Lady (12A) | Close-Up Film DVD
Albert Nobbs (15) | Close-Up Film Review
African Cats (12A) | Close-Up Film Review
Dream House (15) | Close-Up Film DVD Review
This Must Be the Place (15) |

Comments are closed.

Content and site protected by Cloudsafe365