Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang Movie Review
Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang Review

"Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Shane BlackProducer : Joel Silver
Screenwiter : Shane Black
Starring : Robert Downey Jr,Val Kilmer,Michelle Monaghan,Corbin Bernsen,Dash Mihok,Larry Miller,Rockmond Dunbar,Shannyn Sossamon,Angela Lindvall
When Shane Black wrote the screenplay for 1996’s The Long Kiss Goodnight, he
broke his own record as the highest paid screenwriter in Hollywood. Then, just
as suddenly as he had burst onto the scene (with the Lethal Weapon screenplay),
he dropped off the industry radar. Now, almost 10 years later, he returns as a
writer/director with Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang, combining the best elements of his
earlier scripts with a post-modern twist.
Robert Downey Jr plays Harry Lockhart, a two-bit thief mistaken for an actor
and flown out to Hollywood to star in a big-budget film. He’s assigned a
private eye named Gay Perry (Val Kilmer) to teach him how to act tough. His
first night in town he meets Harmony (Michelle Monaghan), a childhood friend
who’s come to Tinseltown to make it as an actress. Soon all three find
themselves involved in murder cases reminiscent of the detective novels with
which Harry and Harmony grew up.
If the plot that unfolds is a bit more convoluted than your average action
flick, it’s because Black is, in part, going for Double Indemnity, not Lethal
Weapon 5. The opening credits evoke the Saul Bass titles from films like
Anatomy of a Murder. Each chapter is given the name of a different Raymond
Chandler book. The script itself is based, in part, on Brett Halliday’s mystery
novel Bodies Are Where You Find Them.
But it isn’t just a noir that Black’s trying to shape, either. This is more
like a roast of the entire buddy cop genre. No sooner does Harry’s voiceover
narration begin than lines like “I’ll be your narrator this evening”
immediately undercut it. His narration goes on to twist the timeline, forget
things, criticize itself and other movies, and even interact with the film to
move extras out of the way.
The self-reference of the narration spreads to the rest of the film. The plot
is driven, in part, by an attempt to make a movie of a famous detective novel.
Black doesn’t confine the references to one genre, either. Everything from
RoboCop to The Natural gets a shout-out, but the film never loses focus. Even
the title comes from the Japanese name for James Bond.
The film also plays with the buddy genre’s conventional definitions of
masculinity by having one of the buddies be gay (as it’s the film’s least
subtle joke, I’ll let you guess which one). The result is what may be the first
openly gay action hero in mainstream cinema. Like most aspects of the movie,
this twist is handled with intelligence. But in a film where one of the
funniest running gags involves grammar, would you expect anything less?
None of this would work without the dedicated performances of Kilmer and
Downey. Their repartee is electric, and even riffs on their hyped off-screen
reputations: Kilmer as the difficult, arrogant jerk and Downey as the bumbling
ne’er-do-well. Intentional or not, it works. Furthermore, Downey’s precision
comic timing helps the narration become its own character without letting its
irony or playfulness become gimmicky.
While Black is busy making fun of several genres, he never lets the film itself
fall short as an example of any of them. Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang works as a buddy
cop picture, a noir, and a straight-up comedy. The same witty banter and tight
action (even some of the same gags – but funnier) of previous Black efforts are
present here. The difference is the added layer of winking homage that makes
this worth repeated viewings. Essentially, what Black has done here is to make
a film that does for the action genre what Scream did for the slasher flick.
Reviewed at the 2005 Toronto International Film Festival.
This highly underrated film appears on DVD with commentary from Black, Kilmer,
and Downey, plus a gag reel. It's a must-see, so get it today!
Let's hope for more kiss, less bang.
Reviewer: David Thomas





