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A Cock And Bull Story (2006) Movie Information:
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A Cock And Bull Story (2006) Synopsis:
Flipping back and forth between the 18th Century and the hapless efforts of the 21st Century filmakers, "Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story" is the making of a movie adapted from the notoriously unfilmable English literature masterpiece, "The Life and Opinions of Tristram Sahndy, Gentlemen," written by Laurence Sterne.
A Cock And Bull Story (2006) Movie Review:
Like Charlie Kaufman's Adaptation, this film takes an askew approach to a novel, in this case Laurence Sterne's 1760 groundbreaker The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman. Like the book, this is a completely mad film within a film, setting narrative aside for a free-wheeling examination of identity.
Coogan plays himself, an actor starring as both the narrator Tristram and his father Walter. After a day of shooting, his girlfriend (Macdonald) joins him on set with their infant son, waiting patiently while he indulges in his insecurity with his costar (Brydon), flirts with his assistant (Harris), convinces the writer and director (Hart and Northam) to hire Anderson to play a new character (a plan that backfires gloriously), and generally has a crisis of identity before shooting resumes the next morning.
At one point, Coogan describes the book as "a post-modern classic written way before there was any modernism to be post about", and the film runs with this idea, piling flashback upon fantasy upon cutaway to hilariously examine a vain movie star who's trying to put his past (namely the enduring Alan Partridge character) behind him and move on. In taller shoes than anyone else. Every moment contains a joke--dialog, visual gags, riffs on film set life, parodies of both biopics and period movies.
The film within the film is amusingly camp, with some extremely witty moments; while the behind-the-scenes action has a raw, fly-on-the-wall feel to it. The cast has a ball with it all, merrily throwing punch-lines into the mix every few seconds. Coogan impressively and impeccably sends up his own image, Brydon sharply matches him pace for pace, and there are moments of sheer genius from Fry, Anderson and Hart. And pretty much everyone else, for that matter.
In the end it's not terribly easy to sift through the insanity. The point of it all is rather murky, even though the astute insights are fairly consistent. What really matters is that it keeps knowing filmgoers laughing consistently all the way through.
NB. To add a further surreal touch, the distributor arranged our press screening to be held at Framestore CFC, a regular London screening venue, which was used as the set for the screening of the film within the film. It was quite odd to see the place we were actually sitting up there on the screen in front of us. Especially since Coogan was sitting in my seat.
A Cock And Bull Story (2006) review written by: Rich Cline