Great Film: The Ladykillers
A classic crime comedy that evidently can't be updated.
The humor in this movie is not only British, which is notoriously
misunderstood by American audiences (and vice versa), which is odd
because both the writer and director were American, but it is also now
five decades old. Only the best American comedies have lasted anywhere
near that long (consider, for example, the sad fate of many of the
movies that people thought were really funny in the 80s Police
Academy, anyone?). The reason The Ladykillers has not only survived but
has now been remade is because the comedy in it is not only effective,
but it is intelligent, and it is very difficult not to be impressed by
a comedy with a brain.
Alec Guinness is in top form as the leader of the gang, whose members
reflects criminals of all walks of life. The ingenious plan is to rent
out a room from a sweet old lady while they pull off a heist. The
comedy, for me, lies in the difference between what is planned and what
is played out, particularly in the difficulties that the gang of
criminals have in outsmarting a sweet old lady who acts like a
grandmother supervising a group of unruly grandchildren.
The problem that the movie has is that the pace is very slow and much
of the comedy has faded over the years, but structurally and
intellectually it remains a respectable film, even more now in
comparison to its disastrous remake. What went wrong in the remake is
that they did not maintain who the character of Mrs. Wilberforce was,
because it was the juxtaposition of her as a frail old woman surrounded
by toughened criminals that made it funny when things kept going wrong
in their plan. In the remake she is replaced by Mrs. Munson, a
tough-talking woman who was to be feared from the outset. There is no
irony in being overpowered by someone more powerful than yourself from
the outset, which I imagine is why the remake also featured Marlon
Wayans and a case of irritable bowel syndrome, which I have never seen
used in an even remotely amusing way.
While the original film may be a bit too slow for modern audiences, it
is indeed charming the way 87-year-old Mrs. Wilberforce continually
foils their carefully thought out plans, many times inadvertently. Alec
Guinness is wonderful as the band's leader, wearing outrageous false
teeth, nearly rivaling Lon Chaney as the man of a thousand faces, and
Peter Sellers is one of the criminals as well. I'm no expert about
British comedies or Alec Guinness' early works, but I can certainly
tell enough from watching this movie that the Coen Brothers' remake did
nothing to impress the British about Hollywood's respect for the
classics.
Cast
- Professor Marcus played by Alec Guinness
- Claude (a.k.a. 'Major Courtney') played by Cecil Parker
- Louis (a.k.a. 'Mr. Harvey') played by Herbert Lom
- Harry (a.k.a. 'Mr. Robinson') played by Peter Sellers
- One-Round (a.k.a. 'Mr. Lawson') played by Danny Green
- The Superintendent played by Jack Warner
- The Old Lady played by Katie Johnson







