Rope
Rialto Theatre – Brighton Fringe
Reviewed – 11th May 2018
β β β β
“hysterically funny despite its morbid subject matter”
Fans of Alfred Hitchcock will immediately recognise Rope as the source material for his 1948 film of the same name. But though Patrick Hamiltonβs piece is of a slightly different flavour, it isnβt a stretch to see why it appealed so much to the Master of Suspense.
Set in 1920s London, we spend an evening in the lives of Brandon and Granillo, two students who have killed a young man named Ronald Kentley. There is no reason for the murder except to prove that they can get away with it. Brandon, the ultra-vain mastermind, refers to the deed as βpassionless, motiveless, faultless, and cluelessβ, that is to say, βperfectβ. However, Granno (as he is affectionately referred to by Brandon) is less than convinced that they are going to get away with it. Brandon has decided to host a dinner for several guests, including Kentleyβs father, but to add βpiquancyβ to the affair, he has hidden his victimβs remains within spitting distance of the diners, in a large wooden crate in the middle of the room.
Most unusually for a piece of this kind, we start the play knowing exactly who the murderers are and, in a perverse twist, find ourselves encouraged to root for them. Brandonβs enthusiasm for βliving dangerouslyβ is infectious, and it is hard not to feel sympathy for the nerve-frazzled Granno who one suspects was never that keen on the killing at all. In a traditional suspense play, for example a whodunnit, we may not know exactly βwho has done itβ, but we know the formula and we know roughly what the conclusion must be (or what must be done to subvert it). So unusual is Ropeβs conceit of letting us in on the secret immediately, that we are genuinely left guessing as to its trajectory until the dying seconds. To reveal the path it does take would be to give away too many plot points, but suffice to say the second half is just as surprising as the first, not always an easy task to pull off.
Rope is also hysterically funny despite its morbid subject matter; it is a testament to the cast that they are able so effectively to tread the line between humour and suspense. The central characters themselves operate as the embodiments of these two aspects of the play. Watching Graeme Dallingβs performance as the deliciously cold Brandon is like a joyride, and just as he marvels at the craftsmanship of his murder, so the audience are undeniably impressed by dramaβs deft construction. Meanwhile the anxious guilt of John Blackβs Granno perfectly echoes the nail-biting tension from which we are never free.
The piece is exceptionally well suited to the small space we are in; the claustrophobia of the apartment setting spreads seamlessly into the audience. The size of the place – as well as the number of people squeezed in – means that you are likely to find your view of goings-on significantly obstructed, but such is the nature of the play that this turns out to be a minor issue. Indeed, it almost serves to create the impression that we are peeping through a keyhole, seeing things that we shouldnβt be in the room next door.
Though the characters routinely reference Nietzsche and discuss over dinner the ethics of murder and war, there is no βmoralβ to Rope per se. We are left to draw our own conclusions from the actions of Brandon and Granno and test our own consciences against their professed lack thereof. This is fitting as didactics would undoubtedly dampen the playβs sense of dread, as well as our ambiguous relationship with the protagonists. Ultimately, though, much like the motiveless murder itself, the play aims squarely to entertain, and on that count, it very much succeeds.
Reviewed by Harry True
Rope
Brighton Fringe
Related
Other productions of this play
β β β β | Queen’s Theatre Hornchurch | February 2018
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