Raising Arizona (Coen, 1987): Prince Charles Cinema, 6.10pm
This is a 35mm presentation.
Time Out review:
The superbly labyrinthine plotting of Blood Simple must have been
a hard act to follow; praise be, then, to the Brothers Coen for
confounding all expectations with this fervently inventive comedy.
Sublimely incompetent convenience-store robber Hi McDonnough (Cage, at
his best yet) seems doomed to return repeatedly to the same penitentiary
until true love hoves in view in the form of prison officer Edwina
(Hunter). Spliced in a trice, the frustratedly infertile couple kidnap
one (surely he won't be missed?) of the celebrated Arizona quintuplets,
heirs to an unpainted-furniture fortune. But happiness being evanescent,
complications ensue when a pair of Hi's old cellmates turn up in search
of sanctuary; and then there's the problem of a rabbit-shooting biker
of hellish hue, hired by Arizona Senior to find his missing brat. What
makes this hectic farce so fresh and funny is the sheer fertility of the
writing, while the lives and times of Hi, Ed and friends are painted in
splendidly seedy colours, turning Arizona into a mythical haven for a
memorable gaggle of no-hopers, halfwits and has-beens. Starting from a
point of delirious excess, the film leaps into dark and virtually
uncharted territory to soar like a comet.
Geoff Andrew
Here (and above) is the trailer.
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