Why Don’t You Just Die! (Papa, Sdokhni) (2018)
Runtime: 99 minutes
Directed by: Kirill Sokolov
Starring: Alexander Kuznetsov, Vitaly Khaev, Evgeniya Kregzhde, Michael Gor, Elena Shevchenko
From: White Mirror Film Company
This seems like a typical day in Russia to me! As there are a few mutuals on Letterboxd who write their reviews in Cyrillic because they are Russian, my comment is in jest. I’m OK with watching Soviet and Russian movies despite what’s happened in recent years-and I’ll say no more on that topic.
In this special early Tuesday posting, the reason I saw this movie on Arrow’s streaming platform: director Kirill Sokolov went to Hollywood & directed the upcoming They Will Kill You, starring Zazie Beetz & set to release late next month. That trailer has been seen a few times, although the trailer that I can't escape is the one for Scream 7.
Presumably, Kill won’t be quite as dark and acerbic in its pitch-black comedy, as this was DARK-and honestly, the movie just turned me off so I’m not as over the moon for it like most are. I was a fan of the opening act-a young dude with a hammer goes to the apartment of his girlfriend’s parents. Dude and dad (the latter the most Russian-looking middle-aged bald dude you’ll ever see; he plays a cop) engage in an extended brawl that wrecks several different parts/items in the apartment. The arrow description invoked several comparisons… Tarantino, Wright, and Raimi. Well, this is sometimes non-linear and the movie features blood spraying/plenty of blood lost, so this plus the dark comedy explains the comparisons.
At first the movie was interesting, full of creative moments and laughs were had. Then, for my esoteric, peculiar tastes, Die became too unpleasant, not that enjoyable, and deliberately ludicrous to boot. Of course, there are my biases against modern cinema so YMMV. The dad is a cop who you can call a bastard-in fact, “evil” is a better term; that character alone might be a problem for some.
I don’t hate Die and despite my complaints, the film overall was still fine due to its creativity and amusing moments. The movie at least wasn’t mainstream nor did it feel “safe” so that does deserve some credit in this modern landscape. Heck, there’s inventive camera movements done in place of constant cutting, which is another positive. However, if I ever do see They Will Kill You, more likely than not it will be reserved for streaming viewing.