Carnage Review
By Rich Cline
After their 11-year-old sons are involved in a playground fight, their parents meet to make sure everything is fine. Penelope and Michael (Foster and Reilly), parents of the injured boy, are happy to let bygones be bygones until they begin to suspect that Nancy and Alan (Winslet and Waltz) aren't properly punishing their son. Over the course of the next hour or so, liaisons shift as their civilised surface gives way to seething bitterness. And it certainly doesn't help that they open a bottle of Scotch.
Nothing about this sounds very cinematic: four people in one room bickering, bonding and bickering some more. And indeed, the script is fairly theatrical as it circles and pounces on big issues, pushes each of the characters to the limit and seeks to provoke rather than explain. But Polanski creates a set that allows for remarkably clever camera movement, as we share the characters experience of being stuck in this place. And this gives the actors space to create memorable interaction.
The standouts are the women, who are more expressive as mothers concerned about fiercely protective of their children, and also annoyed with their husbands.
Liberal-minded writer Foster is like a wounded tiger, holding back until she has no choice but attack and draw blood. In a role that has more kick than when the play was first staged in 2006, Winslet is an investment banker who's trying to keep the peace, at least until she gets a stomach bug (perhaps from Penelope's cobbler?). Meanwhile, Waltz is a lawyer who is constantly on his mobile and Reilly is a salesman whose hatred of hamsters causes another ruckus.
This blackly hilarious script is packed with attempts to be polite ("We are not going to get into these children's quarrels"), backhanded judgements and, eventually, open hostility. A continual stream of running gags keeps us laughing because they're both hilarious ("Doodle" vs "Darjeeling") and brutally real ("Why does everything have to be so exhausting?"). And as the hysteria escalates, it's only comical because of what it reveals about each of us.

Facts and Figures
Year: 2011
Run time: 80 mins
In Theaters: Friday 18th November 2011
Box Office USA: $2.5M
Distributed by: Sony Pictures Classics
Production compaines: Constantin Film Production, Sony Pictures Classics
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 4 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 71%
Fresh: 124 Rotten: 50
IMDB: 7.2 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Roman Polanski
Producer: Said Ben Said
Screenwriter: Yasmina Reza, Roman Polanski
Starring: Kate Winslet as Nancy, Jodie Foster as Penelope, Christoph Waltz as Alan, John C. Reilly as Michael
Also starring: John C Reilly, Roman Polanski