The Denver Post

“Death of Stalin” deploys satirical stings

- By Christophe­r Kompanek

★★★5 Rated R. 97 minutes.

The style of humor in satirist Armando Iannucci’s latest film, “The Death of Stalin,” is a frightfull­y uneasy one. Sight gags and slapstick erupt from a pervasive atmosphere of dread and terror.

In one early scene, an orchestra conductor is so overcome with worry that a wiretap may have caught him disparagin­g the titular dictator’s musical discernmen­t that he faints, thwacking his head on a metal bucket. Just moments before, Stalin (Adrian McLoughlin) had phoned in a request for a recording of the performanc­e.

But because it’s for live radio, it hasn’t been taped, causing the producer (Paddy Considine) to sheepishly hold the studio audience hostage for a repeat performanc­e. They applaud wildly — knowing that their very existence is at the pleasure of an unpredicta­ble madman.

A replacemen­t conductor — still in his bathrobe — is dragged in from his home, where he assumes that the knock on his door is the secret police coming to haul him off to prison (or worse). As he leaves his building, many of his neighbors are also being violently carted away.

Even the highest-ranking members of the government are scared that they will inadverten­tly do something to get themselves killed: Communist Party secretary Nikita Khrushchev (Steve Buscemi) has his wife write down everything he says — along with the dictator’s reaction — studying the ever-evolving list to refine his behavior. Central Committee member Vyacheslav Molotov (Michael Palin) is such a loyalist that when Stalin’s goons imprison his wife, he assumes she deserved it.

As Stalin’s deputy, Georgy Malenkov (Jeffrey Tambor) should be next in line, but Stalin’s brutal enforcer Laventri Beria (Simon Russell Beale) has already begun his savage plotting for power. Beale, who’s known as a great Shakespear­ean stage actor, plays Beria like Iago, jumping from one betrayal to another. In a more traditiona­lly constructe­d comedy, he’d play the straight man, acting as a foil to the comic antics of Buscemi, Palin and Tambor. But while Iannucci whips up a fever-pitch frenzy, his film, based on a 2017 graphic novel, is not a farce, but a tragicomed­y. The dark elements are too corrosive to be tempered by laughter.

When Stalin’s deranged son pulls out a gun in a crowd of mourners surroundin­g his father’s coffin, there’s a palpable fear that he might actually kill someone. This dampens the humor in a series of one-liners (penned by Iannucci, with co-screenwrit­ers David Schneider and Ian Martin). Throughout the film, comic moments are derailed by jarringly violent outbursts (or the threat of them).

When power is based on whim and blind loyalty, that creates an untenable atmosphere, the film argues, placing ideology on shaky moral footing.

It’s not surprising that the film was banned in Russia, where Vladimir Putin appears to be following in the footsteps of the dictator who is being lampooned here.

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