

That it doesn’t cave in beneath the weight of its own chaotic, po-mo posturing is down to the charming, not to say disarming, delivery from three fabulous lead performances and Black’s deft hardwiring of genre conventions with outrageously funny booby traps. The violence is bloody but nonchalant - Harry variously loses a finger, acts as a local punch-bag and has his balls electrocuted, and the idea is to laugh. You’re not really meant to, but it is a policy that opts for hip gesture over genuine drama, not so distant from Tarantino’s movie-movie world where emotion is denied a visa. The plot itself is so jet-propelled it’s impossible to follow. We’re talking the kind of meta-lunacy where the narrator - a testy Harry - can spool the film backwards to re-run to a forgotten detail, admit an evident cheapness, or even have theĪt times it strains its own conceptual arrogance, shaving scarily close to the blather of Last Action Hero (which Black had a hand in). The LA scene, the director’s old turf, is smeared across the screen and junked by Harry’s motor-mouthed comebacks, fed by Black’s caustic attack on his own industry. Or is it the other way around? It’s a traditional beat lurching through a lurid, contemporary world. The story is partly based on a Brett Halliday novel and keeps tabs on its own fictional dime-store scribe Johnny Gossamer, whose novels eerily echo the gumshoe smog of the plot. Out of the bloody remains, he’s assembled a manically askew take on pulp fiction.

Can you make a movie undeniably shallow, base, violent (and incomprehensible), yet invest it with satirical cunning and knowingness, energised by brilliantly barbed screenwriting? Yes, it transpires, you can.īlack, who burned out at the close of the ‘80s, has taken the formula he helped cement - Lethal Weapon, The Last Boy Scout et al - turned it on its head and slammed it into the sidewalk. His murder-mystery-noir-farce (it’s kind of a first) is, at heart, a deconstruction of both Kael’s complaint and Bond’s sexy, trigger-happy delirium. For not only does it reference the working title of 007’s fourth adventure Thunderball, it is the name of legendary critic Pauline Kael’s second collected work, a label penned to deride the thrill-seeking shallowness she felt had irrevocably poisoned cinema. It’s a snarky in-joke, a gleeful signpost to exactly where this energetic and blackly comic return to the fold for screenwriter Shane Black (who directs for the first time) is headed. That this film is called Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang is a big hint.
