Black comedies don鈥檛 come much blacker than 'The Death of Stalin'
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Black comedies don鈥檛 come much blacker than 鈥淭he Death of Stalin,鈥 the latest satiric whirligig from co-writer and director Armando Iannucci, best known in the United States for 鈥淚n the Loop鈥 and HBO鈥檚 鈥淰eep.鈥 The perfervid skullduggery of politics really juices him.
Based on a French graphic novel by Fabien Nury and Thierry Robin and co-written by Iannucci's frequent collaborators, David Schneider and Ian Martin, it鈥檚 set in March 1953, shortly before Stalin鈥檚 sudden demise from a heart attack. The terror he inspires hits us right away when a radio broadcast of Mozart鈥檚 Piano Concerto No. 23, a piece beloved by the dictator, goes unaccountably unrecorded for his future delectation. Mistakes like this promise a one-way ticket to the gulag or worse. Under the frantic ministrations of a Radio Moscow bureaucrat (Paddy Considine) the concert is quickly performed again and, this time, recorded.
The Joseph Stalin of this movie, played with a broad Cockney accent by Adrian McLoughlin, loves American western movies even more than Mozart. (Both of these loves are based on fact.) He refers to his Central Committee members as his 鈥減osse,鈥 but, as they all know full well, those old westerns were replete with lynchings and shootouts. When Stalin keels over, the Kremlin intrigue kicks into high gear, with each Committee member conniving for power.
It鈥檚 a marvelous crew of comic actors, all of whom, like McLoughlin, don鈥檛 bother to sport a Russian accent, which makes the impersonations all the funnier. They include Rupert Friend as Stalin鈥檚 dissolute son, Vasily; Jeffrey Tambor as Malenkov, Stalin鈥檚 putative successor; Steve Buscemi as Nikita Khrushchev (just thinking of Buscemi as Khrushchev is laugh-inducing); Michael Palin as Vyacheslav Molotov (he of the infamous cocktail); and, best of all, that grand Shakespearean actor Simon Russell Beale as Lavrenti Beria, the lethal head of the NKVD.
The central conceit of 鈥淭he Death of Stalin鈥 is that what is funny is not always just funny. In this sense, the film is closer in spirit to 鈥淒r. Strangelove鈥 than, say Mel Brooks鈥檚 鈥淭he Producers.鈥 The latter was a jape; the former was a cautionary howl. It鈥檚 a howl that very much resonates in our own political era. This must be why Russia banned this film for, among reasons, being 鈥渆xtremist.鈥 They got that right. Grade:聽A- (Rated R for language throughout, violence, and some sexual references.)