Odds are high that you’ve seen Kit Harington on “Game of Thrones,” the show that made him famous as George R.R. Martin’s conflicted,fur-swathed hero jon Snow. Odds are not high, unluckily, that you’ve seen Harington in his funniest and weirdest project as of this writing: the HBO sports spoof “7 Days in hell.”
For reasons I’ll never fully understand, Harington’s turn in “7 Days in Hell” flew largely under the radar, even tho this brief, ridiculous, and outright hilarious movie was made while Harington was starring on “Game of Thrones.” (In 2015,to
So,who does Kit Harington play in “7 Days in Hell?” That would be the clownish British tennis pro Charles Poole,who’s quite a departure from Harington’s “Game of Thrones” character Jon Snow. Charles, controlled by his openly twisted bully of a mother Louisa (a brilliant Mary Steenburgen), is a total buffoon, and that’s me being polite; he never seems to follow the thread of conversation, spends time in interviews painstakingly explaining the rules of tennis to experienced sports reporters like Soledad O’Brien (playing herself), and overuses the word “indubitably” while never, ever using it correctly.(Charles’s apparently fragile and likely very smooth brain tends to break down under too much pressure – in one of the film’s funniest shots, the “camera crew” catches Charles standing in the corner of his hotel room staring at the wall like something out of “The Blair Witch Project.”)
The central tennis match in the movie takes place between Charles and Aaron Williams,a hotshot American player known as the “bad boy” of tennis played by Andy Samberg. Adorned in a truly bizarre spiky white-blonde wig and some of the shortest tennis shorts you’ll ever see in your entire life, Aaron is a whirling dervish of chaos who keeps waylaying the match by do
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