Los Angeles Times

Nothing learned from ‘Lesson’

- — Katie Walsh

A sadistic boss gets his comeuppanc­e in director Alex Salazar’s “A Lesson in Cruelty,” written by Gregory P. Wolk. Justin Lebrun tears into the role of privileged banker Julian Hassole with gusto, but his efforts don’t help that as written, Julian is a poor man’s version of a Neil LaBute character from the ’90s — a powerful man who insouciant­ly revels at the taboo language he hurls at everyone around him. He seems to laugh at his own naughty wickedness, in the form of lowest-common-denominato­r racism, sexism and classism.

Julian’s tortured employees throw him a Roman feast for a birthday celebratio­n, where the airing of grievances turns bloody, as the mob turns on their Caesar.

The characters at whom Julian directs his identityba­sed cruelty are presented as total stereotype­s — a Latino driver who uses “señor” repeatedly, an accented Asian woman, a Jewish man with a yarmulke and sidecurls. Their interactio­n with him feels as if it’s supposed to inform some sort of social commentary, but it completely falls flat with these one-dimensiona­l characteri­zations.

“A Lesson in Cruelty” tries to affect a dark comedic tone but fails spectacula­rly. There’s no comedy, despite Lebrun’s vamping, and the dark elements are far too disturbing and violent. An extremely melodramat­ic score doesn’t help the situation and only adds to the amateurish aesthetic. This lesson can only be described a bizarre and pointless. “A Lesson in Cruelty.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 12 minutes. Playing: Arena Cinelounge Sunset, Hollywood.

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