Have you ever thought of going in a car
into a desert with a guy who would like to have a shoot out? Well if
your answer is any of the possible nods, you gotta watch this movie.
It starts off with a decent EXT-Hollywood written on top of the LA
hills. And there are two guys fully armed and about to kill a WOMEN.
I have to, have to specially describe about the conversation of the
two; one asks to the other about "Do ya know, who got shot in
the eyeball?". This instinct says that how settled the director
is and the way he is good at what he is.
Technically the movie has a pretty good
screenplay that makes you glued to the screen. I can recollect some
of the best dialogue writers(QT). The story just unfolds on telling
the first Psychopath with the first scene. A struggling story writer,
Martin ( played by Colin Farell) wishes to write a different story,
which has all the gory psychopaths but does end with a peace making
one in the end. As the movie goes on the different psychopaths unfold
letting us how everyone is inter connected. With the initial one
who's in the disguised form, the title of the movie appears(I gotta
say the titles have a special place, which you would know right in
the end of the movie).
There is a crazy friend, Billy (played
by Sam Rockwell) of Martin , who kinda kidnaps dogs from wealthy guys
with his old ally Hans (played by Christopher Walken). As Martin
tries to write up a story of all the seven psychopaths, he comes
across first one... Who's the Jack of diamonds from the first scene.
Billy crazily gives an ad in a newspaper about the story saying
"Share your weird story, we'll make that into a movie".
With a resurrecting lover, a guy joins the list with his lover which
makes 3. Meanwhile Billy and Hans come kidnap a dog from the local
don . And the rest of the story is all about how these people are
getting connected and how craziness leads people into psychopaths.
All you gotta look out in this story
was the way the screen-play was handled. As I said earlier, somewhere
in your sub-conscious mind you'd compare it with Quentin Tarantino's
work. I hope the movie goes well at all the award functions.
Bottom-line: A bagful of surprises.
That's all folks,
Mani.
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