7 Days in Hell
7 Days in Hell | |
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Genre |
Comedy Mockumentary |
Written by | Murray Miller |
Directed by | Jake Szymanski |
Starring | |
Narrated by | Jon Hamm |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) |
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Producer(s) | Jonathan Buss |
Editor(s) |
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Cinematography | Craig Kief |
Running time | 45 min. |
Distributor | HBO Films |
Release | |
Original network | HBO |
Original release |
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External links | |
Website |
7 Days in Hell is a mockumentary directed by Jake Szymanski and written by Murray Miller. The film premiered on July 11, 2015 on HBO[1] and July 8 on HBO Now.[2]
Plot
Aaron Williams (Andy Samberg) and Charles Poole (Kit Harington) are professional tennis players who face off in what becomes the longest match in history. The mockumentary explores the backgrounds of the two competitors.
Aaron Williams is considered "The Bad Boy of Tennis." He was found on the streets and adopted by Richard Williams, who raised Aaron with his daughters, Venus and Serena Williams. He begins to engage in risky behavior with Rod Stewart and David Copperfield when his tennis career takes off. At the 1996 Wimbledon Finals, on his championship point, his serve hits a line judge, who has an immediate heart attack and dies. Williams falters and loses the championship. At the ceremony following the match, Williams lashes out and pushes Prince Edward, the Duke of Kent (Howie Mandel), and disappears.
Charles Poole is a child prodigy. While physically gifted and being very attractive, Poole was forced into a tennis career by his mother (Mary Steenburgen), who sped his education along by sending him to a vocational school where he earned a degree as a truck driver. Thus, Poole is very dim-witted and his mother threatens to disown him if he loses. He appears on a local show hosted by Caspian Wint (Michael Sheen) as a 15 year old and is on track to become the youngest professional tennis player in history. He tells Wint that he idolizes Aaron Williams.
Williams resurfaces in Sweden creating a male underwear line which causes groin chafing. Because Williams runs out of funds, he descends into pornography and an addiction to PCP. He is arrested, convicted, and is sent to a Swedish prison.
Two weeks before 2001 Wimbledon starts, Poole is interviewed by a reporter. When asked if he is a better player than Williams, he says yes. This comment reaches its way to Williams, who is participating in a massive shower orgy. After hearing the comment, he leaves, escapes, and becomes a free man, according to Swedish law.
Williams claims he will be playing in Wimbledon. The All-England Chair Committee, led by the Duke of Kent, refuses to let him play. Edward Pudding (Fred Armisen), also a member of the committee, believes that letting Williams play will spike interest for the tournament, and he suggests that Williams play an Englishman who is likely to beat him, which turns out to be Poole.
Poole is in his hotel room the night before the match. He receives a call from Queen Elizabeth (June Squibb), who tells him to "win."
On the first day of the match, the match plays as expected, with Poole winning the first set 6-0. Before the second set starts, a thunderstorm suspends play for the rest of the day.
On the second day, a revitalized Williams takes the second and third sets. According to Pudding, everyone at the match knew Williams hid cocaine, but it was "rude to point things out." The match resumes, and it goes to a fifth set before sunset suspends the match. That night, Poole gets another call from the Queen, and is next seen staring at a wall. In a credits scene, it's revealed Poole suffered some sort of breakdown.
On the third day, neither Williams and Poole are willing to surrender the match. After eight hours of intense tennis, the match is suspended. That night, Poole gets a disturbing and threatening call from the Queen.
On the fourth day, Poole is about to win the match, but a streaker runs onto the court. Williams tries to subdue her, but ends up having sex with her. After they finish, a male streaker runs onto the court, with whom Williams also has sex. The female streaker runs back onto the court, and a threesome takes place until the match is suspended on account of darkness.
Before the fifth day, Williams arranges a press conference. After refusing to apologize for the "incidents," Williams shares with the press that he has located his birth father, British singer Engelbert Humperdinck. He claims he will dedicate his performance at Wimbledon to all Englishmen. Even if Williams's claim was fabricated, John McEnroe believes the statement was a brilliant tactic, which interfered with Poole's psyche. After darkness again suspends the match, Poole is seen beaten in an elevator by the Queen in the stomach. He asks his mother for help, but she reminds him of her threat to disown him.
Before the sixth day, Williams is hit by a truck, which is implied to be Poole. Williams leaves the hospital and elects to play with one arm, which he does for a little bit. In the 196th game, with Poole serving 98-97 and triple match point, something happens to Poole that is considered by some to be the greatest travesty in sports history. On his first serve, David Copperfield magically appears on Poole's shoulders. Since there is no rule for that, the point counts. Copperfield later exonerates Williams from any wrongdoing, and claims he was supposed to appear on the Statue of Liberty. Poole, visibly distracted, fails to win the match in the sixth day.
Before the seventh day, Poole and Williams meet at a joint press conference. A reporter informs Poole about a sex tape made by his ex-girlfriend, Lily (Karen Gillan) and Williams, though it was more embarrassing for Williams as he had failed to get an erection. Poole attacks Williams and removes his wig, revealing Williams's bald scalp. The two elect to settle their matters on the court. Queen Elizabeth makes an appearance at the match, and the tensions between the two players reach a boiling point. They challenge each other to fight and are restrained by security guards. Queen Elizabeth urges everyone to stop, and lets the players fight.
Poole and Williams charge the net and kill each other after simultaneously hitting each other in the head with their rackets. The two players are buried together. The documentary ends with video flashbacks of Poole and Williams praising each other.
Cast
- Andy Samberg as Aaron Williams
- Kit Harington as Charles Poole
- Mary Steenburgen as Louisa Poole, Charles' mother
- Karen Gillan as Lily Allsworth, Charles' supermodel ex-girlfriend
- Lena Dunham as Lanny Denver, former president of Jordache
- Will Forte as Sandy Pickard, author of Aaron Williams: The Glorious Jester
- June Squibb as Queen Elizabeth II
- Michael Sheen as Caspian Wint, a British sports journalist and host of the sports talk show Good Sport
- Fred Armisen as Edward Pudding, former president of the All England Club
- Howie Mandel as Prince Edward, Duke of Kent
- Jon Hamm as the narrator
Also appearing as themselves are David Copperfield, Chris Evert, Filip Hammar, Jim Lampley, John McEnroe, Soledad O’Brien, and Serena Williams.
Broadcast
The American premiere on HBO on July 11, 2015 was watched by 579,000 viewers.[3] In Australia, the telemovie premiered on August 8, 2015 on showcase.[4]
References
- ↑ Bibel, Sara (June 22, 2015). "'7 Days in Hell' Starring And Samberg & Kit Harington to Premiere Saturday, July 11 on HBO". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved June 30, 2015.
- ↑ http://www.indiewire.com/article/6-must-watch-tv-shows-and-movies-coming-to-hbo-now-in-july-2015-from-the-drop-to-7-days-in-hell-20150702
- ↑ Metcalf, Mitch (14 July 2015). "SHOWBUZZDAILY’s Top 100 Saturday Cable Originals (& Network Update): 7.11.2015". ShowBuzzDaily. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
- ↑ Knox, David (15 July 2015). "Airdate: 7 Days in Hell". TV Tonight. Retrieved 16 July 2015.