MySpace


A Selection Of My Reviews

Visit My Profile For The Complete List

- Attack Of The Blind Dead (1973)
- Battle Royale (2000)
- Bay Of Blood (1971)
- The Boondock Saints (1999)
- Boy Eats Girl (2005)
- Brick (2005)
- The Descent (2005)
- Dust Devil (1992)
- Enter The Dragon (1973)
- Equilibrium (2002)
- Evil (2003)
- The Goonies (1985)
- Grindhouse (Planet Terror / Death Proof) (2007)
- Hard Candy (2005)
- Hot Fuzz (2007)
- Hundra (1983)
- Joint Security Area (2000)
- Mad Max (1979)
- Man Bites Dog (1992)
- Memories Of Murder (2003)
- Near Dark (1987)
- Night Of The Living Dorks (2004)
- The Poseidon Adventure (1972)
- Pump Up The Volume (1990)
- Rabid (1977)
- RoboCop (1987)
- Shall We Dance? (1996)
- Showgirls (1995)
- The Slit-Mouthed Woman (2007)
- Slither (2006)
- Strip Nude For Your Killer (1975)
- Tokyo Drifter (1966)
- The Untold Story (1993)
- The Wizard (1989)


Ryan / Movies At Midnight



Last Updated: 7/24/2009

Send Message
Instant Message
Email to a Friend
Subscribe

Gender: Male
Status: Married
Age: 31
Sign: Scorpio

City: PLAINSBORO
State: NEW JERSEY
Country: US
Signup Date: 6/23/2006
Tuesday, April 24, 2007 

Category: Movies, TV, Celebrities
HOT FUZZ (2007)


Edgar Wright, along with co-writer Simon Pegg and faithful stalwart Nick Frost, fuckin' love movies.

Nick Angel (Simon Pegg) is one of the best cops in all of London.  He is so good that he makes the rest of his department look bad in comparison.  His arrest rate is 400% higher than anyone else!  So the higher ups do the only thing they can think of - promote him to sergeant and ship him off to work in Stanford, the safest village in all of England.  Here, Angel soon discovers that life is on a slightly different path, where the biggest problems seem to be a recurring "living statue" performance artist and an escaped swan.  Angel also discovers that the town, which hasn't had a reported murder in over twenty years, does seem to have an abnormal amount of fatal accidents.  Angel's city-trained mind kicks into overdrive, as he works alongside his new partner Danny Butterman (Nick Frost) to put clues together that nobody sees.  Angel's linked clues leads him to Simon Skinner (ex-Bond, Timothy Dalton) a local grocery store owner who may just have a bit too much to gain from the recent "accidents" of four locals, but will the rest of his squad even listen?

Three years after the fan-favorite genre-bender SHAUN OF THE DEAD, the powerhouse trio of Wright/Pegg/Frost (as well as under-noted producer Nira Park), who've been linked ever since the brilliant British TV show Spaced, return for another tour-de-force of action, excitement, comedy, over-the-top gore, and more loving references than you could ever hope to catch.  The team is on top of their game and prove once again that adding a British accent to anything make it just that much better!  HOT FUZZ glides with an almost supernatural ease from city cop/village cop mismatched buddy comedy to horrific giallo thriller complete with black-gloved killer and finally to the action movie mode featuring tidbits from every action movie ever made. Ever.

This is no mere parody though, but in essence a living, breathing mass consciousness of the action genre as it has evolved over that past thirty odd years.  It is brought into existence by the main group mentioned above, with a complete understanding of what the genre means, and with the enthusiasm of a twelve-year old lad who has not become jaded from seeing too many disappointments on the big screen and revels in the excitement of explosions and the fascination with characters that may be bigger than life but with a core that can be connected with.  This twelve-year old ideology of action is literally brought to the screen via Frost's somewhat dim and childish Danny, who not only asks just the right nudge-nudge-wink-wink questions to his new hero found in Pegg's Angel, but has to show him via home screenings of POINT BREAK and BAD BOYS II just what he is.  It serves as both subtle set-up to later scenes but also take care of the pre-requisite scene in which the hero is shown by the love interest that he has never lost his will to do what needs to be done.

Every hero of course needs a villain, and Angel's main target of suspicion through the film is Simon Skinner, who is gleefully brought to the screen by Timothy Dalton.  Dalton absolutely eat ups the opportunity to pop in and out as the is-he-or-isn't-he the bad guy of the film.  His wonderful quips throughout the film, courtesy of the Wright/Pegg screenplay, egg Angel on, almost begging him to catch him in the act of a crime.  Skinner always seems to be just one step ahead of Angel, almost able to perceive what Angel will do next.  Not only does Dalton relish in the motifs of the antagonist, but he is also given a henchmen, a hulking brute that has been spawned by cross-breeding Night Court's Richard Moll, Lurch of The Addam's Family (the character is even called Lurch) and MOONRAKER's Jaws.  If you need further proof for the love of all things "James", Tommy McCook and the Supersonics' "Down On Bond Street" get some action on the soundtrack.

Part of the fun of HOT FUZZ is seeing just how many different references can be caught.  The greatest trick that the film pulls though, is that much like what SHAUN OF THE DEAD did with the zombie film and Spaced did with sit-coms, it metamorphoses into an honest-to-god action flick.  People do not watch AIRPLANE! for the thrill of not knowing if the plane will make it.  They do not watch SATURDAY THE 14th (thought I was going to say SCARY MOVIE, eh?) to be frightened. They do not watch ROBIN HOOD: MEN IN TIGHTS for period piece adventure and romance.  They will watch this when they need an adrenaline rush.  And that is what sets this apart from the others.  And everybody on board this flick fuckin' knows it.  
Previous Post: 13 TZAMETI Review | Back to Blog List | Next Post: ROBOCOP Review
Jerry

 
This film was a pleasure to watch.  Reading your review is a pleasure as well.
 
Posted by Jerry on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 - 2:09 AM
[Reply to this
Mitch Emerson
Mitch Emerson

 
I agree with Jerry. It wasn't the best comedy, but it wasn't the worst by far. I will see it again on DVD but probably won't buy it.
 
Posted by Mitch Emerson on Friday, April 27, 2007 - 7:19 PM
[Reply to this
Sam & Eleanor
Samantha Johnsen

 
Excellent review!!!  The more positive reviews I read on "Hot Fuzz", the more I want to see this film!
 
Posted by Sam & Eleanor on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 - 2:27 AM
[Reply to this


 

God I need to see this soon! Awesome review mate.


 
Posted by on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 - 2:30 AM
[Reply to this
The World's Sexiest Canadian

 
Fantastic review.  Agree 100%.
 
Posted by The World's Sexiest Canadian on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 - 3:13 AM
[Reply to this
♥Kelsey [Silly Sally™]
Kelsey Zukowski

 
Fantastic review! i completely agree with you. Hopefully I will have a review up in the next day or so
 
Posted by ♥Kelsey [Silly Sally™] on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 - 3:17 AM
[Reply to this
Optimum Wound Comics

 
I've seen Zodiac, Grindhouse (twice), 300 etc...
They were all excellent.
But....
HOT FUZZ is the best movie of year so far.
-Jay

 
Posted by Optimum Wound Comics on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 - 4:50 AM
[Reply to this
Dr. Dave

 

Hey Ryan,

forgive me for re-posting thoughts I had on this film from another site, but rarely has a film driven me to anger like Hot Fuzz did! 

I couldn't believe what a self-indulgent, bloated and desperately unfunny movie Pegg, Wright and Frost turned out.

Whereas the homages and spoofs in Shaun.. (which I thought was a brilliant movie) were organic to both plot and dialogue, making it unimportant if you didn't know your Romero from your Fulci but a lovely bonus if you did, in Hot Fuzz everything had to be slavishly pointed out waaaay in advance. Movie sight gags were clumsily hammered into sequences as if to say; "Okay, next we're going to recreate the low angle shot of the duo from Bad Boys 2 as the helicopter passes overhead! Aren't we clever?"

This of course, was after having made sure we got the point by actually showing the scene in question as Pegg and Frost's characters watched it on television. It's not so bad if this visual stunt is pulled once, but it was repeated ad nausea throughout the film.

I thought I would scream if we were shown one more tedious lock-and-load montage! Actually, we got the joke the first time, Edgar. And the second time... and the third time...

The tone of the film was just over the place and its overripe running time just made it agonizing to sit through. Was the editor on vacation or something?

Comedy is a very fine balancing act, and pushing Hot Fuzz to a two hour running time emphasises its already glaring flaws. Surely somebody at Universal should have been aware of this, certainly as I understand it they tested the film to high heaven.

I genuinely feel that this was a case of Pegg and Wright (as well as Universal) getting sucked in by the (justifiably) generous praise heaped upon them for Shaun... and then falling into the fatal trap of believing their own hype.

What a waste of talent.


 
Posted by Dr. Dave on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 - 9:08 AM
[Reply to this
Ryan / Movies At Midnight

 
Your points are well articulated and I will give concede the film is a hair too long.
 
Posted by Ryan / Movies At Midnight on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 - 1:47 PM
[Reply to this
Jenny O'Hara Hamilton Kennedy Butler

 
I'll be seeing this one this weekend.  Awesome review!!  I love Robin Hood Men in Tights.
 
Posted by Jenny O'Hara Hamilton Kennedy Butler on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 - 11:18 AM
[Reply to this
BORIKEÑA

 
well i need some type of adrenaline rush this weekend, so i guess this is what i will be watching  thanks!!
 
Posted by BORIKEÑA on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 - 10:23 PM
[Reply to this
The Popcorn Review

 

Good review. You liked this movie WAY more than we did, LOL.


 
Posted by The Popcorn Review on Wednesday, April 25, 2007 - 10:07 PM
[Reply to this
Ryan / Movies At Midnight

 
What can I say, I have a man-crush on Simon Pegg.
 
Posted by Ryan / Movies At Midnight on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 3:53 AM
[Reply to this
• Eliane •

 
I just saw this. Great review. I am in no way an action film fan so there are many references I probably did not catch. Even though, it was very entertaining.
I was wonderinf if there was any references to Steve McQueen at one point? Or is it just my imagination?
 
Posted by • Eliane • on Monday, April 30, 2007 - 12:04 AM
[Reply to this
Ryan / Movies At Midnight

 
I can't think of any direct McQueen references off the top of my head, but I'll keep an eye out when I watch it next.
 
Posted by Ryan / Movies At Midnight on Monday, April 30, 2007 - 12:12 AM
[Reply to this
Previous Post: 13 TZAMETI Review | Back to Blog List | Next Post: ROBOCOP Review