Gulf News

‘Barry’ offers a profound satire

Bill Hader of ‘Saturday Night Live’ fame plays a hit man who becomes smitten with acting

- By James Poniewozik

If there’s one thing that defines HBOera TV, it’s dramas about violent men. If there’s a second thing, it’s comedies set in and around the entertainm­ent business.

Barry, which began last week on HBO, is both, an audacious mash-up that puts the chocolate of premium cable into its peanut butter, its gun into its greasepain­t.

The title character (Bill Hader), a Midwestern hit man, jets off to Los Angeles, where his handler, Fuches (Stephen Root), has arranged for him to handle some “personal business” for the Chechen mob.

That “business” concerns an aspiring actor and personal trainer who’s been having an affair with a mobster’s wife. But the hit job gets complicate­d when Barry, doing his research, stumbles into an acting class and becomes smitten not only with one of the students, Sally (Sarah Goldberg), but also with acting itself.

He’s no good at it. What he excels at is shooting people, a skill he sharpened as a Marine in Afghanista­n, and Fuches urges him to stay in his lane. “Acting is a very faceforwar­d kind of job,” he says. “You could take up painting! Hitler painted! John Wayne Gacy painted! It’s a good, solid hobby.”

The series, created by Hader and Alec Berg

(Silicon Valley), ingeniousl­y mixes wetwork and dry irony. (The relationsh­ip between Barry and Fuches, as it develops, is very much that of a frustrated actor and a money-minded agent.)

But it would be a cold satire without the transforma­tion of Hader, best known for playing outlandish characters like Stefon on Saturday Night

Live. His Barry is wound so tight he hums, but Hader also shows you the light flicking on inside him for the first time.

The criminal going straight, or pretending to, is a mini genre unto itself (Banshee, Lilyhammer). There are a couple ways you might expect a hit-man-inHollywoo­d story to go: The killer teaches a few lessons to the showbiz phoneys, or he discovers that crime has given him unique insights into human nature.

Not so in Barry. Murder is a soul-numbing day job for Barry that’s done no good for him except pay the bills. It’s a messier, better remunerate­d version of slinging coffee.

There’s a recurring theme in cable dramas that criminalit­y is, if not admirable, at least more authentic and exhilarati­ng than the overcivili­sed straight life. Walter White in Breaking

Bad says that crime made him feel “alive.” Tony Soprano, monster though he may be, is continuall­y contrasted with pathetic and envious civilian schnooks like Artie Bucco.

Here, Barry’s the schnook. He’s not animated by his work but drained by it. For someone who kills for a living, he’s awfully passive, having let his hit-man career happen to him more than having pursued it.

When Barry tries to win Sally over by buying her an outlandish­ly expensive gift, she’s put off by the “weird-ass Tony Soprano move.” When she calls him out on his “toxic masculinit­y” — having no idea how toxic it really is — Barry actually takes it to heart, even if he has a hard time applying the lesson.

Because of Sally’s role as a foil in what is indeed a very male show, I wish her character were better fleshed out. Barry is well-cast top to bottom, though, from Henry Winkler as Gene, the acting class’ passionate but fatuous instructor, to a scene-stealing Anthony Carrigan as NoHo Hank, an incongruou­sly polite Chechen lieutenant.

The spatter comedy is not for the squeamish, but

Barry plays cleverly with the contrast between Barry’s two worlds. His mob clients have their own Hollywood-inspired sense of theatrics, as when Hank needlessly complicate­s a hit by insisting on expressmai­ling the target a bullet, because it will be cooler.

This all might come across glib if Barry weren’t also willing to go dark when necessary, and if Hader were less effective at finding the drama in his comic character.

The season’s last half finds another gear, as the guilt-racked Barry has a harder and harder time compartmen­talising his vocation from his avocation.

By pushing its story to an extreme, Barry hits on a universal conflict.

Like many of us who are not trained assassins, Barry wants to believe he can make moral compromise­s while telling himself, “This is not who I am.”

But there comes a point — Barry crosses that point, and then some — where that’s a crock. What you do is who you are. Barry’s targets, were they still alive, would testify that the guy who killed them was plenty real.

It’s a tricky game Barry is playing, cultivatin­g our empathy for its protagonis­t, then confrontin­g us with this recognitio­n. And the season finale does raise the question of how long the series can string out its double-life premise.

But mostly, Barry pulls off the feat, developing into something more profound than its high-concept premise suggests.

You don’t expect this comedy to find its target in the way it does. And as Barry could tell you, that element of surprise is the mark of a profession­al.

“The spatter comedy is not for the squeamish, but the show plays cleverly with the contrast between Barry’s two worlds.”

 ?? Photos courtesy of HBO ??
Photos courtesy of HBO
 ??  ?? Sarah Goldberg.
Sarah Goldberg.
 ??  ?? Stephen Root and Bill Hader.
Stephen Root and Bill Hader.

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