Ever stumbled into a comedy that makes you cringe-laugh so hard your ribs hurt? 'Duplex' is that movie for me. Directed by Danny DeVito, it follows a young couple, Alex and Nancy, who buy their dream
brooklyn duplex—only to discover their sweet old landlady, Mrs. Connelly, is a nightmare tenant
From Hell. She’s got this innocent facade but orchestrates chaos like a puppetmaster: midnight vacuuming, fake health crises, and even a pet parrot that screams like a banshee. The couple’s attempts to evict her spiral into absurdity, from botched sabotage to accidental arson. It’s a darkly hilarious take on urban homeownership gone wrong, with DeVito’s signature flair for awkward humor. What sticks with me is how it flips the ‘quirky neighbor’ trope into full-blown psychological warfare—you’ll never trust a sweet old lady again.
The film’s genius lies in its escalation. At first, Mrs. Connelly’s antics seem harmless, like her insistence on using their bathroom or ‘accidentally’ breaking their wedding china. But as Alex and Nancy’s desperation grows, so does her malice—like when she fakes a heart attack to guilt-trip them. The satire bites deep: it’s about millennial idealism crashing into boomer entitlement, wrapped in slapstick. I adore how the cinematography mirrors their claustrophobia, with tight shots of the crumbling duplex. By the end, you’re rooting for everyone and no one, which is the mark of brilliant dark comedy.