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Film

Film review: The Death of Stalin

There's a lot to laugh at in this absurd retelling of a dark period of history, says Anne Joseph

October 19, 2017 12:47
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1 min read

The Soviet Union has never been so funny, thanks to the award-winning writer/director Armando Iannucci. The writer behind The Thick of It, Veep and In the Loop has now (along with David Schneider and Ian Martin) turned his satirical pen to the political landscape of 1953 Moscow.

Iannucci and co have adapted The Death of Stalin from the French graphic novels by Fabien Nury and Thierry Robin, which are based on true events. The result is a dark, absurdly comedic plot about how the cruel and self-serving party leadership jostle for power in the immediate aftermath of Stalin’s demise.

Fear and mistrust is all pervading under the Soviet totalitarian regime. Even when the guards outside Stalin’s room hear a loud thud, they are too frightened to do anything. Admitting that Stalin is dead is in itself a terrifying act as it could be construed as treachery but, left alone with him, Beria (Simon Russell Beale), the brutal head of the secret police, tells the dictator: “You have a nice long sleep. I’ll take it from here.”

But what follows, at first, is panic — with no one quite knowing what to do or say — one word or laugh at the wrong moment could precipitate an early death. Each of Stalin’s inner circle tries to out-scheme the other with devastating consequences.