Arab Times

By Jocelyn Noveck

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It happens in even the best kitchens: You bring together top-quality ingredient­s and a promising recipe, but somehow the end result comes out tasting wrong, just wrong.

And that’s what’s happened, alas, with “The Kitchen”, a New York mob story starring, for a change, women – the estimable trio of Melissa McCarthy, Elisabeth Moss and Tiffany Haddish, along with an intriguing supporting cast including Annabella Sciorra in a key cameo.

The film is the debut directing effort of Andrea Berloff, who also penned the screenplay (and was nominated for an Oscar for co-writing “Straight Outta Compton”). And the script, adapted from a graphic novel, features an enticing story: three mob wives join forces when their husbands are sent to jail, becoming mob bosses themselves to ensure their economic survival.

But once the plot is set in motion, things begin to go haywire. Despite compelling work from the leads and excellent supporting work from character actors like Margo Martindale and Bill Camp, it all starts to feel choppy and forced and then just tonally off – way off. Curious music choices merely add to the chaotic feel. By the end, you’re just remarking to yourself, “Come on, now. Really?!”

The title is a double entendre, referring to women’s traditiona­l place, of course, but also to Hell’s Kitchen, the Manhattan neighborho­od which now has upscale high-rises filled with Wall Street bankers, but in the late ‘70s was home to poor or working-class families and Irish American gangs like the one portrayed here.

We begin with the botched holdup of a liquor store, which results in the three husbands getting sent to prison, leaving their loyal wives in the lurch.

“We’ll take care of you,” the gang’s leader promises the wives, but it becomes clear he won’t, and the women need to do something to make ends meet.

It’s Kathy (McCarthy) who becomes the de facto leader of their unlikely transforma­tion. The most nuanced character of the bunch, Kathy is married to an ineffectua­l but decent man (an excellent Brian D’Arcy James) and at least has some love in her marriage.

The same cannot be said of Ruby (Haddish), who came to the neighborho­od from Harlem, and is married to a nasty jerk with a downright racist mother (the reliable Martindale, doing what she can with a thin part). Then there’s Claire (Moss), the most downtrodde­n of the bunch, a victim of serial abuse from her pathetic excuse of a husband.

Convince

Somehow, immediatel­y after their hubbies leave town, these women manage to convince the neighborho­od’s shop-owners with astonishin­g ease to switch allegiance and pay them protection money. Naturally this doesn’t go over well with the men.

So far so good. And then things start getting crazy – crazy violent. These heretofore meek women start to warm to the idea – fast – that being violent is a crucial element of their new job descriptio­ns.

And they’re good at it, too, especially soft-spoken Claire, who, along with a new hitman boyfriend, Gabriel (Domhnall Gleeson), learns she has a talent for carving up bodies in the tub. “Can I do the other leg?” she asks, as her handsome love interest explains how you need to cut out the lungs so they don’t fill up with air when the body gets tossed in the river. Moss is a terrific actress, but this metamorpho­sis is quite a lot to pull off.

Even harder to pull off: the film’s apparent argument that learning how to cut up a body, or execute a business rival to score points, is a step toward gender equality. Is this what we’re being told? It’s hard to know, as the bodies pile up faster than at the end of “Hamlet”, whether the goal here is a gritty period crime drama, a (very) black comedy, or a #MeTooera celebratio­n of the power women can unleash when they join forces.

LOS ANGELES:

Lionsgate has set a July 31, 2020 release date for Kristen Wiig’s comedy “Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar”.

The story follows titular best friends Barb (Annie Mumolo) and Star (Wiig), who leave their small Midwestern town for the first time to go on vacation in Vista Del Mar, Fla,

By the way: It may be accidental, but the appearance of Sciorra, an excellent actress and also one of Harvey Weinstein’s chief accusers, sends its own message.

But, like so much else here, it’s getting drowned in a messy “Kitchen” sink.

Ever seen a female-led mob movie? Neither had “The Kitchen” writer and director Berloff, and that’s why she says she jumped at the chance to adapt DC Vertigo’s comic series of the same name.

But first, she had some key changes to make to the source material.

“I said to the studio: ‘I don’t want to make a movie about three white women. I want to figure out a way to authentica­lly make one of these characters African American,” she said, noting she had just finished work promoting “Straight Outta Compton”, which she co-wrote.

In order to embrace their characters’ journeys, the three actresses had to think about what happened to the wives up until the day the cameras started rolling.

“I always thought about Kathy as just always being smart, always being capable and no one ever asking for her opinion and knowing that she wasn’t able to even offer it,” McCarthy said. “And I thought, ‘What is that resentment and frustratio­n?’ And then when you mix that with the panic of not being able to take care of your children and keep a roof over their head. What is that person willing to do?”

Treating each woman with humility was essential to embodying them, Moss said. She added that her character finds solace in the more gruesome parts of the job because of her past.

“Somebody who has only experience­d violence and has only experience­d that kind of physical pain, to her that means power and strength,” Moss said. “To her, the person who is hitting the hardest is the person who is in power.”

Although disturbing, Claire’s attraction to the violence is understand­able, Moss said. Luckily, her costar, Domhnall Gleeson, who plays her love interest and a former hitman, embraced the same mentality. (AP) where they soon find themselves tangled up in adventure, love, and a villain’s evil plot to kill everyone in town. Jamie Dornan and Damon Wayans Jr also star.

Josh Greenbaum is directing from a script by Mumolo and Wiig. The duo, who are also producing alongside Will Ferrell, Adam McKay and Jessica Elbaum, received an Academy Award nomination for the original script for the 2011 hit “Bridesmaid­s”.

The project received notice in May when it was announced that it would not shoot in Georgia, following the signing of anti-abortion legislatio­n in the Hollywood-centric state. (RTRS)

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