There is something
inherently cinematic about a lot of the best recent “alternative”
British comedy, and yet none of the most likely suspects (Lee,
Munnery) have branched off into directing feature films. One
exception has been the brilliant Chris Morris, whom I interviewed when he was in the U.S. promoting his wonderfully dark comedy Four Lions.
Only one other British
comedian has taken the plunge so far. In 2010, Richard Ayoade, a very
celebrated (and very busy) comic actor and writer, directed and
scripted the charming coming-of-age picture Submarine. Now he's returned with a nightmare comedy called The
Double, based on Dostoyevsky's short story of the same
name.
The film is a highly
atmospheric piece, set in a near-future bureaucratic dystopia. Our
anti-hero Simon (Jesse Eisenberg) is startled when his doppelganger
(also Eisenberg) appears at his workplace and turns out to be a far
more successful version of him. The double becomes his mentor and
attempts to teach him how to con the people around him – bosses,
coworkers, women – but it's evident from the start that there can
only be one Simon in this creepy corporate universe.
Ayoade (right) demonstrated his cinephilia in Submarine, with onscreen references to Dreyer, Melville, and Roeg (and one rather obvious Godardian touch). Here the world he creates is clearly inspired by David Lynch (Eraserhead, Inland Empire), Gilliam (Brazil), Jeunet and Caro (Delicatessen), and Welles (The Trial).
The moody aspect of the
film comes from the fact that Ayoade and coscripter Avi Korine (yes, he's
Harmony's brother) wallpaper the Dostoyevsky scenario with
Kafka-esque paranoia. Simon is a lonely, perpetually ill-at-ease
individual who isn't so much an everyman as the guy we all don't wish
to be. His double is impetuous, charming, and most decidedly criminal
– clearly solid corporate material.
The influence of
Brazil is
seen most clearly in the fact that the dystopia Simon lives in is
populated by a curious mixture of Brits and Americans. The company he
works for is headed by “the Colonel,” a prim and proper
Englishman, played by Ayoade's real-life father-in-law James Fox
(The Servant, Performance). His
immediate supervisor is an eager toady, played by the irrepressible
Wallace Shawn.
Eisenberg
excels in the dual lead roles, doing what amounts to an impression of
Crispin Glover. Playing the girl of his dreams, Mia Wasikowska is the
only performer whose accent occasionally “slips” from British to
American and back (in real life, she's an Aussie). Making welcome
cameos are Ayoade's comedy colleagues Chris Morris (who directed him
in Nathan Barley), Chris O'Dowd (his costar from
The IT Crowd), and Tim Key.
The Double may indeed be too bleak for multiplex
viewers, but it is certain to acquire a cult as years go by. It's an
odd, imaginative little picture that has evocative visuals and a
moodiness that remains with viewers long after they have left the
theater.
The
film is currently in theatrical release, but can also be seen via
Video on Demand on iTunes.
****
Bonus clips:
Bonus clips:
One
of Ayoade's finest comic creations, the utterly untalented Dean
Lerner, porn and horror novel publisher turned actor, from Garth Merenghi's Darkplace (2004):
Ayoade
directed the superb rock-opera satire ADBC: A
Rock Opera (2004). He cowrote the piece with Matt Berry and
costarred with Berry, the Mighty Boosh's Julian Barratt, and Julia
Davis (Nighty Night):
Ayoade's best-known sitcom character, “Moss” from The IT Crowd:
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