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The tale of a police officer who is committed to upholding unpopular laws, who abhors
violence and whose only close personal relationship is with a plant, Hot Fuzz might not
sound like the year's most likely cinematic success story, but this film comes from the
team who brought you Spaced and Shaun Of The Dead and it doesn't pull any
punches when it comes to fun. Described by co-writer/actor Simon Pegg as "a cross
between Heartbeat and Lethal Weapon, and taking a detour through Wicker Man territory", it's formulaic but exuberant, packed with quirky humour and very
difficult not to like.
Causing problems in London because his high arrest record makes his colleagues look
bad, PC Nicholas Angel (Pegg) is transferred to the sleepy English village of Sandford
where, at first, he finds very little to do. Opening with such a depressed, uptight character
in an unhappy situation is a bit of a gamble, making the film initially difficult to engage
with, but patience will be rewarded. Before long, Angel realises that life in the village is
not what it seems ("Ever wondered why the crime rate is so low and yet the accident rate
is so high?") and his attempts to uncover the truth behind a string of grisly deaths
gradually place his own life in peril. The tension is alleviated by his burgeoning
friendship with the irrepressible PC Butterman (Nick Frost), an idealistic country copper,
whose vocational education has come from Hollywood police action movies.
Essentially, this is the same best friends love story that we've seen in the team's previous
work and no attempt is made to pretend otherwise, with many of the same jokes turning
up, but it works nevertheless. Meanwhile, an accomplished supporting cast round out the
population of the village with pitch-perfect performances.
Hot Fuzz is not a perfect film. It has far too many endings, though each is individually
impressive and it would be hard to say which should be dropped; in sequence they
become too repetitive. Its referential humour will leave some viewers lost and audiences
outside the UK will probably find much of it confusing, failing to appreciate, for instance,
the full amusement value of gun battles in Somerfields. That said, it's nice to see a film
which doesn't concern itself so much with marketability as with telling its own story.
The confidence with which the film unfolds works strongly in its favour and it is superbly
constructed, with all sorts of apparently irrelevant early details turning out to be important
later on. It is clearly a labour of love and is probably one of the most entertaining films
you'll see this year.
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Tongue-in-cheek British twist on the buddy cop genre. |
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Writer: Simon Pegg, Edgar Wright
Cast: Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Bill Nighy, Steve Coogan, Martin Freeman, Paddy Considine, Jim Broadbent, Timothy Dalton, Lucy Punch, Edward Woodward, Bill Bailey, Stuart Wilson, Paul Freeman, David Bradley, Rafe Spall, Anne Reid, Billie Whitelaw, Olivia Colman, Alice Lowe, Tim Barlow, Kevin Eldon, Adam Buxton, Joseph McManners, Alexander King, Stewart Wilson
Runtime: 121 minutes
Certificate: 
Year: 2007
Country: UK
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