By Adam Frazier
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Thursday, September 13th, 2012 at 3:43 pm
Killer Joe Directed by William Friedkin
Written by Tracy Letts
Starring Matthew McConaughey, Emile Hirsch, Juno Temple, Gina Gershon, Thomas Haden Church, Marc Macaulay LD Entertainment
Rated NC-17 | 102 minutes
Release Date: July 27, 2012
Directed by William Friedkin (The Exorcist, The French Connection), Killer Joe stars Matthew McConaughey as a charming, soft-spoken, Dallas Police Detective who moonlights as a contract killer.
Friedkin’s film, which is rated NC-17 for “graphic disturbing content involving violence, sexuality, and a scene of brutality,” will no doubt shock some people with its twisted, unrestrained look at dysfunctional, desperate rednecks in the American South. It’s certainly offensive, but gloriously so.
22-year-old Chris (Emile Hirsch) finds himself in debt to drug lord Digger Soames (Marc Macaulay) after his own mother steals the cocaine he was given to sell. Chris, who is as Texas white trash as they come, comes up with the harebrained scheme to hire a hitman to kill his mother, whose $50,000 life insurance policy could easily cover his debts. The problem is, Chris’s little sister Dottie (Juno Temple) is the beneficiary, and she’s a few egg noodles short of a tuna casserole, if you know what I’m saying.
Chris calls upon the services of Joe Cooper (McConaughey) to kill his mother, but Chris and his father Ansel (Thomas Hayden Church) can’t pay Killer Joe upfront, which is one of the hitman’s non-negotiable requirements for providing his services.
When the stone-cold killer gets a look at sweet little ol’ Dottie, though, he makes a deal with Chris and Ansel to take her as collateral for the job. Cooper and his willing, oblivious hostage develop an unusual, Natural Born Killers-esque bond. Things are going just fine until Joe and Ansel can’t pay Joe for killing their mother, and the retainer becomes his personal property.
Based on the play by Pulitzer and Tony Award winner Tracy Letts, Killer Joe is a violent, provocative black comedy that examines the values of the American South in a no-holds-barred style. It’s been a fantastic year for McConaughey, who turned in memorable performances in Soderbergh’s Magic Mike and Richard Linklater’s Bernie, and finally takes the spotlight in Killer Joe with a fearless, nuanced portrayal.
McConaughey’s Joe Cooper is a silver-tongued Southern gentleman with alarming sexual proclivities – all cool and collected on the surface, with a murderous, unstable interior but always confident, always in control of the situation. And while Friedkin’s film won’t be for everyone (deranged and nasty as it can be), McConaughey deserves recognition for his performance, as does Gina Gershon (who plays Chris’s stepmother, Sharla).
The star of Bound and Showgirls harnesses her raw sexual energy and completely embodies this trashy, redneck stepmother who chain-smokes and walks around the trailer without underwear on in front of her stepchildren, smeared mascarca, proclaiming, “Hell, it ain’t nothin’ you ain’t seen before!”
If anything, Killer Joe proves the Academy Award-winning William Friedkin is still a filmmaker with something to say. The man behind The Exorcist, The French Connection, and To Live and Die in L.A. hasn’t made many noteworthy films over the past 20 years, but Killer Joe signifies what could be the beginning of Friedkin’s second wind.
Overall, Killer Joe isn’t for everyone. It’s exceedingly dark, macabre, and violent – sexually perverse – and shows human beings at their absolute worst and their most cold and calculated. It’s a bleak, ironic comedy with terrific performances, and for McConaughey’s character alone, it’s worth seeing.
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Students of the Unusual™ comic cover used with permission of 3BoysProductions
The Mercuri Bros.™ comic cover used with permission of Prodigal Son Press
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