The Star Malaysia - Star2

Throwing out hitman tropes

- By JOE OTTERSON

BILL Hader and Alec Berg were intent on not letting their HBO comedy series Barry fall into the trap of hitman clichés from movies and TV.

“There are probably more hitmen in movies and TV than there are in real life,” Berg said at the Produced By Conference in Los Angeles. “One of the things that kind of helped us is taking all those tropes... (Barry) is the real version of that.”

Hader and Berg co-created the show and serve as executive producers, with Hader also starring in the title role.

Barry revolves around a depressed hitman who wants to be an actor but his criminal past won’t leave him alone.

According to the pair, they were aware that the concept of the show was going to invite scepticism. Berg joked that he had to reassure people when he described it to them.

“I would tell them, ‘I swear it’s so much better than it sounds,’” he said. Berg also said “there’s a version of this show that’s a terrible version,” saying that if the show had just been another Hollywood version of a hitman, it would not have worked the way it does now.

Hader also broke down the working relationsh­ip between himself and Berg on the show, saying Berg is good at keeping ideas from running too wild.

“Alec’s really good at kicking the tyres on these ideas... and adding logic to it and sort of tethering it back down,” Hader said.

He specifical­ly referenced his idea to add daydreams to the show in which Barry imagines what his life could be like if he were no longer a hitman as an idea he took to Berg. “You need that person there to go ‘What about X, Y, Z?’” he said.

Whatever the two are doing is clearly working, as Barry opened to strong reviews when it debuted on HBO in March.

In April, the super-dark comedy received order for a second season.

In her review of the series, Maureen Ryan wrote for Variety: “As a character, Barry is very self-effacing in the first half of the season, but as the stakes get higher, Hader’s performanc­e acquires additional gravity and emotional weight. And it’s worth noting that the show’s depiction of depression is both evocative and respectful.” – Reuters

 ??  ?? Hader plays the titular role in Barry, a series revolving around a depressed hitman who wants to go into acting.
Hader plays the titular role in Barry, a series revolving around a depressed hitman who wants to go into acting.

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