Bullet in the Face
Bullet in the Face is a dark comedy television series developed by Alan Spencer. It premiered on IFC on August 16, 2012. It premiered in Canada on Super Channel on September 11, 2012. The series follows an ex-con, Gunter Vogler, who is recruited into the police force when he is betrayed by his partner and lover.
Synopsis
The story is set in neo-noir Brüteville City, a dystopian city fought over by two vicious mob bosses, agoraphobic elitist Johann Tannhäuser and doltish Racken.While robbing a jewelry store, Gunter Vogler, a sociopath and universally feared hitman, receives an order from his boss, Tannhäuser, to kill his partner and lover, Martine Mahler. Martine, however, complicates the situation when she tells Vogler that she is pregnant with his child. When a police officer interrupts the robbery, Vogler enthusiastically kills the cop, but he himself is shot in the face by Martine.
Waking up in a hospital, Vogler finds himself under the care of the Brüteville Police, who have surgically grafted the face of the detective he killed in place of his own. The police seek to use Vogler's knowledge of the criminal underworld and thirst for vengeance to finally take out the elusive Tannhäuser, with Vogler posing as the deceased cop. Partnering up with the morally unshakable Lt. Karl Hagerman, the two solve crimes while searching for Tannhäuser, including a series of apparent priest suicides and a teenaged murderer.
Characters
- Max Williams as Gunter Vogler: A notoriously unstable and violent hitman, Gunter Vogler invokes comic book supervillains such as the Joker as well as the antihero from the novel and film A Clockwork Orange. He temporarily allies himself with the police in order to seek revenge for being betrayed.
- Neil Napier as Lieutenant Karl Hagerman: Lt. Karl Hagerman is the opposite of Gunter Vogler: he's wimpy, emotional and prone to homoerotic gaffes. Vogler murdered every one of Hagerman's previous partners, but the two are forced to work together when Vogler receives a face transplant of Hagerman's last partner, who may have been his gay lover.
- Jessica Steen as Commissioner Eva Braden: The police commissioner, Eva Braden is overwhelmed by the violent gang wars in Brüteville. She recruits Gunter Vogler to fight evil with evil. She is sexually frustrated and unsuccessfully attempts to seduce both Hagerman's former partner and Gunter Vogler.
- Kate Kelton as Martine Mahler: Martine Mahler was Gunter Vogler's partner and lover before she betrayed him and shot him in the face. She is simultaneously having affairs with both Tannhäuser and Racken, whom she hopes to manipulate into a gang war against each other.
- Eddie Izzard as Johann Tannhäuser: A secretive, agoraphobic crime lord who favors chess. He sets up Gunter Vogler and Martine Mahler to kill each other, both of whom are assassins in his employ. Tannhäuser believes himself the father of Martine's baby and has big plans for the child, but not the mother.
- Eric Roberts as Racken: A dimwitted crime lord who opposes Tannhäuser. Racken believes himself married to Martine Mahler, though she is actually conning him. Racken recruits Vogler, who he believes to be a dirty cop, after Vogler convinces Racken that there's a mole in his organization.
Production
Visual influences include graphic novels, Quentin Tarantino, Ridley Scott, and film noir such as Alphaville. Other influences cited by journalists include Face/Off, Sin City, and Guy Ritchie films, all of which it parodies. Spencer cited the level of violence in the series, describing it as "the most violent comedy in television history". The Parents Television Council confirmed this by listing the series amongst its "seven most violent shows on cable" for that season where it bore the distinction of being the only half-hour comedy on the list. With its filmic influences, Spencer thought it appropriate to include stylized action sequences and violence not usually associated with half-hour comedies. The camerawork, such as use of the Dutch angle, was designed to be reminiscent of graphic novels as well as the Cinema of Europe.
The series musical score was composed by James Gelfand. The theme song was composed and produced by AmA, a group whose members are Amanda Bauman and Patrick Doyle; Bauman provided the vocals.