Hot Fuzz

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Critics' Reviews

Metascore
®
81
Universal Acclaim
out of 100
'Hot Fuzz' Is Too Much
By John Hartl, Film critic, MSNBC

Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg's zombie comedy, "Shaun of the Dead," arrived with a blast in multiplexes three years ago. If a reunited Monty Python had chosen to remake "Night of the Living Dead," the result couldn't have been more of a treat.

As a team — Wright as director and writer, Pegg as star and co-writer — demonstrated remarkable assurance. They worked together previously on the British television series, "Spaced," and had developed a shorthand that worked especially well with the mixture of horror and giggles they explored in "Shaun."

Their followup film, "Hot Fuzz," is also stylish good fun, though it's longer than "Shaun" and doesn't quite justify the extra running time. It has a similar manic energy, much of it derived from Pegg's performance as a talented improvisor who is once more burdened with a dim partner. But the mystery plot creaks a bit.

Instead of finding ways to defeat the rampaging undead, Pegg plays a deadly serious London-based cop, Nicholas Angel, who's almost too good at his job. Relieved of his urban duties, he's assigned to deal with the supposedly quiet village of Sandford. He's been sent there because other London cops are embarrassed by his impressive crimefighting record, which just tends to make their relative lethargy look bad.

When this doggedly by-the-book lawman first applies his tactics to a group of underage Sandford drinkers, you tend to see their point. They may be guilty, but what has he accomplished aside from emptying out the village pub? Indeed, the humor-free Nicholas is something of a nuisance until the town is truly threatened.

Among the town's harmless drunks is his chubby, none-too-bright new partner, Danny Butterman (Nick Frost), the son of the local police chief (Oscar winner Jim Broadbent). Danny is thrilled with the idea of working with a big-city cop, and he has visions of car chases and gun battles that are straight out of American testosterone epics like "Point Break" and "Bad Boys II."

Nicholas and Danny do become buddies, in a way, and Danny gets his wish, especially when they collaborate to solve a series of "accidental" impalings and beheadings in the village. As the story winds down and the special effects speed up, the picture starts to resemble an overproduced Michael Bay blockbuster. The line between parody and homage grows awfully thin as the explosions take over.

If you didn't blink at the three-hour-plus running time of "Grindhouse," you may not have a problem with "Hot Fuzz," which runs for only a couple of hours. Wright (reportedly a Bay fan) does make sure that there's never a dull moment, though a quiet one now and then might have been advisable.

Especially fun are the cameos by Bill Nighy, Paddy Considine, Steve Coogan, Billie Whitelaw and Timothy Dalton, who is hilariously over-the-top as sleazy Simon Skinner, a supermarket owner who appears to be the prime suspect.

But best of all is the opposites-attract chemistry between straightfaced Pegg and goofy Frost, who deserve another vehicle together. May they get one soon.

More movies on MSNBC 

Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg's zombie comedy, "Shaun of the Dead," arrived with a blast in multiplexes three years ago. If a reunited Monty Python had chosen to remake "Night of the Living Dead," the result couldn't have been more of a treat.

As a team — Wright as director and writer, Pegg as star and co-writer — demonstrated remarkable assurance. They worked together previously on the British television series, "Spaced," and had developed a shorthand that worked especially well with the mixture of horror and giggles they explored in "Shaun."

Their followup film, "Hot Fuzz," is also stylish good fun, though it's longer than "Shaun" and doesn't quite justify the extra running time. It has a similar manic energy, much of it derived from Pegg's performance as a talented improvisor who is once more burdened with a dim partner. But the mystery plot creaks a bit.

Instead of finding ways to defeat the rampaging undead, Pegg plays a deadly serious London-based cop, Nicholas Angel, who's almost too good at his job. Relieved of his urban duties, he's assigned to deal with the supposedly quiet village of Sandford. He's been sent there because other London cops are embarrassed by his impressive crimefighting record, which just tends to make their relative lethargy look bad.

When this doggedly by-the-book lawman first applies his tactics to a group of underage Sandford drinkers, you tend to see their point. They may be guilty, but what has he accomplished aside from emptying out the village pub? Indeed, the humor-free Nicholas is something of a nuisance until the town is truly threatened.

Among the town's harmless drunks is his chubby, none-too-bright new partner, Danny Butterman (Nick Frost), the son of the local police chief (Oscar winner Jim Broadbent). Danny is thrilled with the idea of working with a big-city cop, and he has visions of car chases and gun battles that are straight out of American testosterone epics like "Point Break" and "Bad Boys II."

Nicholas and Danny do become buddies, in a way, and Danny gets his wish, especially when they collaborate to solve a series of "accidental" impalings and beheadings in the village. As the story winds down and the special effects speed up, the picture starts to resemble an overproduced Michael Bay blockbuster. The line between parody and homage grows awfully thin as the explosions take over.

If you didn't blink at the three-hour-plus running time of "Grindhouse," you may not have a problem with "Hot Fuzz," which runs for only a couple of hours. Wright (reportedly a Bay fan) does make sure that there's never a dull moment, though a quiet one now and then might have been advisable.

Especially fun are the cameos by Bill Nighy, Paddy Considine, Steve Coogan, Billie Whitelaw and Timothy Dalton, who is hilariously over-the-top as sleazy Simon Skinner, a supermarket owner who appears to be the prime suspect.

But best of all is the opposites-attract chemistry between straightfaced Pegg and goofy Frost, who deserve another vehicle together. May they get one soon.

More movies on MSNBC 

100
Time: Richard Corliss
The best, surely the smartest, English-language movie of the year to date.Read Full Review »
90
NewsWeek: David Ansen
Summer hasn't arrived, but the funniest riff on a summer movie genre has already landed.Read Full Review »
90
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kevin Crust
Wright and Pegg are storytellers who weave their naughty bits into genuine characters and a plot. It's a ridiculous plot, but one that's absolutely in the spirit of the films they're satirizing.Read Full Review »
83
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Lisa Schwarzbaum
In the very funny cop comedy Hot Fuzz, overachieving London police officer Nicholas Angel (Simon Pegg) commits a very British sin: He's too good.Read Full Review »
80
Village Voice: Robert Wilonsky
A British variation on Hollywood nonsense, and as such it's a little gloomier, a little coarser, and a lot more cerebral--oh, and funnier than all the "Reno 911!" boxed sets combined.Read Full Review »
80
Salon.com: Stephanie Zacharek
At once deeply affectionate and sharply observed: There's never anything smart-alecky about Wright's approach as a director.Read Full Review »
80
The New York Times: Manohla Dargis
Since Mr. Wright and Mr. Pegg are essentially parodying self-parodies, they have also smartly kinked up their conceit by setting most of the film in a sleepy village that might as well be called Ye Old English Towne, thereby wedding one of the most irritating British exports to one of the most absurd American ones. Think of it as "The Full Monty" blown to smithereens.Read Full Review »
80
Slate: Dana Stevens
Really, do we need another dumb action movie to remind us how dumb action movies are?...Yes. We absolutely do.Read Full Review »
75
ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
It's a blast.Read Full Review »
75
Philadelphia Inquirer: Steven Rea
It's bloody carnage - or it's ketchup, or bolognese sauce, at the very least.Read Full Review »
See all Hot Fuzz reviews at metacritic.com »