Shot with pleasure

Issue 

Shot with pleasure

My New Gun
Directed by Stacy Cochran
Starring Diane Lane, James LeGros
At the Mandolin, Sydney
Reviewed by Gabrielle Jean Carey

Forget the futuristic fantasies of Terminator and Aliens; My New Gun shows us what happens when a woman gets hold of a gun in modern day, middle-class suburbia — and it s a lot more fun.

It s also a lot more realistic, too. When housewife Debbie is given a revolver by her middle-aged-with-values-from-the-Middle-

Ages husband, it s a status symbol to him and a nightmare (literally) to her. Things get more complicated when Debbie s neighbour and possible love interest, Skippy, asks to borrow the gun.

The dialogue is witty and the performances off-beat. Diane Lane (best known for Coppola's The Outsiders and The Cotton Club in the early '80s) as Debbie is fabulous to watch, and James LeGros (Drugstore Cowboy) is as likeable as the boy next door the name Skippy suggests. Stephen Collins is suitably infuriating as the unsympathetic husband.

Less about gun control and more about taking control of your own life, My New Gun is a deliberately low-key absurdist comedy which works from the premise that what goes on in our ordinary lives is actually very bizarre.

First-time feature director and writer Stacy Cochran has shot a movie that is sophisticated and sly and enjoyable from the first image to the last.

If you like our work, become a supporter

Green Left is a vital social-change project and aims to make all content available online, without paywalls. With no corporate sponsors or advertising, we rely on support and donations from readers like you.

For just $5 per month get the Green Left digital edition in your inbox each week. For $10 per month get the above and the print edition delivered to your door. You can also add a donation to your support by choosing the solidarity option of $20 per month.

Freecall now on 1800 634 206 or follow the support link below to make a secure supporter payment or donation online.