Let’s Take a Moment to Appreciate the Goons in Anora
In Buster Keatonâs Cops (1922), the silent-film star sidesteps two officers so that they bonk each other on the head and pass out. Itâs still funny as hellâslapstick comedy in its purest form. And if thereâs anything entertainers have learned since the first fool slipped on a banana peel, itâs that nothing is funnier than a clown.
Itâs my pleasure to inform you that this particular brand of comedy hasnât lost its charm. In the stellar new film Anora, director Sean Baker (Red Rocket) homes in on a specific species of clown genealogy: the henchmen. You may know them as goons. Theyâre buffoonish yes-men who begrudgingly follow orders and lament their lowly status in the criminal hierarchy. Honestly, goons are my favorite characters in just about any medium. But Mob grunts have not been this funny since The Sopranosâ Michael Imperioli and Tony Sirico ate mayonnaise packets to survive a night in the woods in the famous âPine Barrensâ episode. No disrespect to the Sopranos cast, Deadwoodâs William Sanderson, or Goodfellasâ Joe Pesci, but we need to carve out some space on the Mount Rushmore of comedy gangsters.
If this is somehow the first time youâre learning of Anora, the film follows an exotic dancer and sex worker named Anora (Mikey Madison)âor âAni,â as the character prefers. She falls in love with one of her clients, Ivan (Mark Eydelshteyn), a Russian billionaireâs son, who parties 24/7, wastes away his parentsâ money, and orgasms so quickly it seems like Anoraâs barely even working. Itâs young love. Unlimited cash. But when the couple get married in Vegas, shit hits the fan.
Enter stage left: three of the goddamn funniest goons youâve ever seen onscreen. Thereâs Toros (Karren Karaguilan), Ivanâs godfather, who swears far more than an Orthodox priest ever should; Garnick (Vache Tovmasyan), the Armenian muscle who canât make a single decision for himself; and Igor (Yura Borisov), the quiet and pouty grandmaâs boy who just wishes that heâd stayed home on any given day.
Ivanâs parents call in the hilarious trio to force the young couple to annul their marriage and rid their familyâs name of the scandalous pairing. Unsurprisingly, Ivan bolts out the door when they arrive. Anora freaks out, battering the goons as if she were starring in a particularly violent episode of Tom & Jerry. Garnick breaks his nose, falls over, and shatters a glass table. Igor, uh, is bitten! Toros just stands gobsmacked at the chaos before him. If this took place in the Looney Tunesâverse, all three of them would have foot-long welts growing out of the tops of their skulls and tiny birds circling their heads. I loved every minute of it.
The trio hop in a car to form a search party for Ivanâand, of course, this is when shit really hits the fan. Toros denies Garnick a trip to the hospital to fix his broken nose, so Garnick takes painkillers and throws up all over Torosâs car. Later, Toros bolts into a restaurant and berates its patrons about Ivanâs whereabouts. Hereâs a fun fact: The diners are real people who have no idea that theyâre in a movie. An angry customer curses them out in Russian, screaming, âHow many times have I told you I havenât seen the kid? Weâre trying to have dinner here!â Baker jokingly told Vulture of that very real moment, âThey wanted to help him find his lost son.â
The film taps into a style reminiscent of the Safdie brothersâ Uncut Gems (2019), in which relatively unknown actors and average Joes take on comedic bit parts. Anoraâs gangster trio have considerably more acting experience than Wayne Diamond or the real-life jewelers in Gems. But they still excel in lapping up laugh after laugh because they feel like real guys. Their conceived relative obscurity is part of the jokeâand falling on their asses every now and then doesnât hurt, either.
Of course, the central couple bear the emotional weight of Anora. Iâm sure that if youâve heard anything about the Cannes Film Festival Palme dâOr winner already, itâs likely the filmâs nonjudgmental view of sex work, the ending (which I wonât spoil here), or Mikey Madisonâs electric lead performance. Iâm positive youâve read about its Oscar buzz as well. Itâs all true! But Anoraâs most dramatic highlights wouldnât hit quite as hard without the humor in between.
Anoraâs situation is terrifying. She marries into a family she knows nothing about and is essentially kidnapped until the gangsters can sort out their annulment. Baker has crafted an otherwise horrifying predicament for a young woman. Thankfully, the filmmaker doesnât go to truly dark places; instead, the characterâs unwillingness to grasp the trouble sheâs in is played for laughs. The three stooges fail repeatedly. They are just as confused as she isâand they keep audiences from ever feeling like Anora is in any true danger. Call them the villains, but my three new favorite goons are Anoraâs real heroes.