Saskatoon StarPhoenix

ALL EYES ON EISENBERG

Dark comedy gets a creative boost from actor’s pivotal performanc­e

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com twitter.com/chrisknigh­tfilm

Dark comedy is probably the hardest cinematic genre to deliver successful­ly. With science-fiction, you can sometimes skate by on technology; with a western, on horses. But the dark comedy requires precise balance and timing; it’s like hard-boiling an egg while juggling lemons.

The Art of Self-defense pulls it off. Much of that has to do with the central performanc­e by Jesse Eisenberg, who has made a career out of playing mild-mannered pushovers and mouthy jerks. Here he starts as the first type and morphs into the second, thanks to time spent in a karate dojo with a manipulati­ve instructor (Alessandro Nivola) and a bizarre recruitmen­t strategy.

When we first meet Eisenberg’s milquetoas­t character, Casey, he’s learning French by practising such phrases as “I don’t want any trouble; I’m just a tourist.” His workmates don’t respect him. Even his answering machine gives him sass: “You have ONLY one unheard message,” it informs him. “No one else left you a message.”

That answering machine, along with the presence of VHS tapes and the absence of cellphones, suggests that writer-director Riley Stearns has set his tale in the 1980s. There aren’t any definitive signposts, however; it’s more of a general sense of analogue, a Napoleon Dynamite feel.

Casey gets mugged one night while out buying dog food for his Dachshund by a motorcycle thief who has the good sense to first ask if he’s carrying a gun. There may be an anti-gun message lurking in the script, or perhaps it’s pro-gun; the comedy was so dark it was hard to make out the morality.

In either case, Casey wanders into a karate class and decides to sign up. The sensei follows a list of rules that includes “If it works, use it.” As he tells his students: “I would teach a reverse wrist splicer from Mongolian Judo if it wasn’t something I just made up.”

Casey throws himself into his studies, quickly moves from a white belt to a yellow, and celebrates by buying all-yellow food that night. Sensei reminds his students that the dojo’s former grandmaste­r wore a rainbow belt, a designatio­n above black that he created and then bestowed on himself. He was killed by a hunter who mistook him for a bird. (So yeah, I think it’s anti-gun.)

The screenplay has a deliberate­ly stilted quality, and it informs the performanc­es. On the advice of his sensei, Casey switches his language lessons to German, learning such useful phrases as: “Buy the next round of beers or I will fight you.” And while it wouldn’t do to call it a romantic subplot, he and one of the other students (Imogen Poots) develop an understand­ing that brings them closer.

“I want to be what intimidate­s me,” says our man of his desire to master the martial arts. It’s a sombre statement, but the way he goes about the transforma­tion in inherently humorous, not least because he’s in thrall to an instructor who seems stuck in perpetual adolescenc­e. (It’s instructiv­e that the dojo’s rules, including a tacked-on No. 11, are there for the benefit of a children’s class as well as the adults.)

Rule No. 11? “Guns are for the weak.” So definitely anti-gun. Also quite dark. And very funny.

 ?? PACIFIC NORTHWEST PICTURES ?? The Art of Self-defense owes its success to Jesse Eisenberg, left, who stars alongside Phillip Andre Botello.
PACIFIC NORTHWEST PICTURES The Art of Self-defense owes its success to Jesse Eisenberg, left, who stars alongside Phillip Andre Botello.

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