Say Your Prayers ***
Dir: Harry Michell. With: Harry Melling, Tom
Brooke, Derek Jacobi, Anna Maxwell Martin. 84 mins. Cert: 15
The team behind 2016’s eyecatching indie Chubby
Funny - producer Helen Simmons and director Harry Michell – return with
another agreeably offbeam comedy, this one with a starrier cast and a goofy, Four Lions-ish premise. It’s the tale of sibling Christian hitmen who, envious
of the column inches logged by rival fundamentalists, set out to off a
Dawkins-like author at a literary festival in Ilkley. Tim (Harry Melling) is
the childlike younger brother, ill-suited to grisly murder; the uptight Vic
(Tom Brooke) an unrepentant sociopath. Their target (Roger Allam, master of
glib dismissiveness) need not worry unduly: an astutely timed prologue shows
our would-be ruthless killers stalking a rambler who looks just enough like
Allam for the first of several terrible mistakes to be made.
The pacing of that opening instantly elevates
Michell’s film over a half-dozen recent British crime-comedies that have wrung
similar setups for limp farce. We’re heading towards a setpiece that’s the
Yorkshire-set Britpic equivalent of Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation’s
opera-house assassination, but the gags carrying everyone there are rooted
firmly in character, allowing supporting players to dig in and make an
impression. Anna Maxwell Martin is formidably sarky as a detective aghast at
having to enter the artsy-fartsy literary scene; Derek Jacobi has a classy
cameo as a priest who justifies the hit with chilly mouthfuls of scripture;
Matthew Steer’s brisk, funny sketch of the spineless festival chief will likely
cue cringes of recognition in some quarters.
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