Martin Scorcese's Badfellas, 6 November 2006
Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Cops who are robbers. Robbers who are cops. And a hip hop star
synonymous with exposed underpants who steals the show.
A welcome return to form for the premier gangster movie-maker, Martin
Scorcese bats one outa the park with *The Departed*. Ferociously funny,
doggedly compelling, a *tour de force* of gritty production,
tightly-wound storyline, sneeringly salty language and flame-throwing
acting chops. And there's Leo and Matt and Martin and Alec and Marky
Mark. And Jack. All so deliciously at the top of their game that the
word Oscar is bandied about this movie as profligately as it is around
Sesame Street's resident Grouch. Deservedly so.
Jack Nicholson is Irish mafia kingpin, Frank Costello, who opens the
movie cultivating the trust of a young street kid, who grows to be
Colin Sullivan (Matt Damon), a Massachusetts Police Officer whose
loyalties lie not with law enforcement, but with his mentor, Costello.
Concurrently, Billy Costigan (Leonardo DiCaprio), a former street thug
who passes his academy training with flying colors, and who also
applies to the Massachusetts P.D., is rejected on the grounds that you
can take the thug out of the street, but not vice versa, and is
"invited" instead to go deep undercover within Costello's mafia.
Confronting Police Captain Queenan (Martin Sheen), being forced to
relive his checkered past, though DiCaprio mines incredible emotive
shadings, that scene is definitively stolen by Mark Wahlberg, as the
Cynicism juggernaut, Detective Dignam. With this film, Wahlberg comes
into his own as an Actor; though his scenes are short, they are as
cuttingly sweet as limes and salt rubbed into paper-cut wounds.
*The Departed* quickly establishes its triangle of the gangster
(Costello), his mole in the police (Sullivan), and the police mole in
his outfit (Costigan) and then sits back and lets the plot twist, as
each faction tries to untwist its knickers and weed out their
respective moles.
Right hand man to Costello is Mr. French (Ray Winstone, almost
unrecognizable under heavy beard and faux-Boston accent given away by
his customary élan, i.e. as tender and subtle as a crucifix nail).
Under Captain Queenan is Ellerby (Alec Baldwin, in another of this
movie's smallish roles that is eaten alive by its actor Baldwin gives
Wahlberg a run for his money as comic relief scene-stealer). Amongst
the battle-scarred veterans, Scorcese chose wisely to insert a "new"
beautiful face as female lead - Vera Farmiga, as police psychoanalyst,
Madolyn, who moves in with Sullivan and then begins an affair with
Costigan (nice!), setting up a tangential triangle which might have
obscured the larger criminal drama in a lesser director's hands, but
otherwise only served to verify that old saw, "chicks dig bad guys."
Sullivan is a policeman, sure, but as a mole for Costello he is
inherently a Bad Guy whether Madolyn knows this or not, she is drawn
to his duplicity and callousness. Costigan, though also a cop, is so
deep undercover that the street is rubbing off on him in ways that make
Madolyn's pants-suit pants moist - once again, no medals for figuring
why she prescribes him "private therapy."
*The Departed* is unmistakably Scorcese, with all the classic Scorcese
stamps; his characteristic camera moves, angles and smash-cutting;
foreboding or calming source music juxtaposed over contrary visuals,
and pulling a depth of performance from his actors that must take them
places in their heads they never want to visit again without an
attorney.
Selling Leo as a hard case in Scorcese's *Gangs of New York* was mildly
obtuse; here, in their third collaboration, DiCaprio is steaming with
mental muscle, street smarts and a spring-wound temper that
turbo-charges his screen presence like no other role he has ever
attacked. Not only might it be one of *his* best performances on film,
the same can be said of Nicholson, whose conniving and ruthless
Costello seems always to be on the verge of either welcoming you as a
brother or snapping your spine and appending a pun.
Re-made from a recent Hong Kong movie *Mou gaan dou* (*Infernal
Affairs*, 2002) (written by Felix Chong and Siu Fai Mak and directed by
Mak and Wai Keung Lau), it is a slight annoyance that Scorcese would
insult his audience by performing that patronizing surgical act of
re-rendering foreign art for the Great American Unwashed; on the other
hand, *The Departed* (screenplayed by William Monahan) stands extremely
tall on its own merit, not exuding that alarmist *stanque* of "remake"
(*Oliver Twist*) or worse, "bad remake" (*Fun with Dick and Jane*) or
worse still, "pointless remake" (*Psycho*).
Whereas Scorcese's *Goodfellas* showed us the world through the eyes of
only bad fellas, *The Departed* slews its camera over the wrong AND the
right side of the law, graying the line between honor and justice and
law and order with its complex layers of hypocrisy. Among thieves,
among cops alike, we see honor and duplicity and lawlessness and order.
The worlds are exactly the same. But the chicks dig the bad guys.
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The Departed (2006)
Martin Scorcese's Badfellas, 6 November 2006

Author: dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Cops who are robbers. Robbers who are cops. And a hip hop star synonymous with exposed underpants who steals the show.
A welcome return to form for the premier gangster movie-maker, Martin Scorcese bats one outa the park with *The Departed*. Ferociously funny, doggedly compelling, a *tour de force* of gritty production, tightly-wound storyline, sneeringly salty language and flame-throwing acting chops. And there's Leo and Matt and Martin and Alec and Marky Mark. And Jack. All so deliciously at the top of their game that the word Oscar is bandied about this movie as profligately as it is around Sesame Street's resident Grouch. Deservedly so.
Jack Nicholson is Irish mafia kingpin, Frank Costello, who opens the movie cultivating the trust of a young street kid, who grows to be Colin Sullivan (Matt Damon), a Massachusetts Police Officer whose loyalties lie not with law enforcement, but with his mentor, Costello. Concurrently, Billy Costigan (Leonardo DiCaprio), a former street thug who passes his academy training with flying colors, and who also applies to the Massachusetts P.D., is rejected on the grounds that you can take the thug out of the street, but not vice versa, and is "invited" instead to go deep undercover within Costello's mafia. Confronting Police Captain Queenan (Martin Sheen), being forced to relive his checkered past, though DiCaprio mines incredible emotive shadings, that scene is definitively stolen by Mark Wahlberg, as the Cynicism juggernaut, Detective Dignam. With this film, Wahlberg comes into his own as an Actor; though his scenes are short, they are as cuttingly sweet as limes and salt rubbed into paper-cut wounds.
*The Departed* quickly establishes its triangle of the gangster (Costello), his mole in the police (Sullivan), and the police mole in his outfit (Costigan) and then sits back and lets the plot twist, as each faction tries to untwist its knickers and weed out their respective moles.
Right hand man to Costello is Mr. French (Ray Winstone, almost unrecognizable under heavy beard and faux-Boston accent given away by his customary élan, i.e. as tender and subtle as a crucifix nail). Under Captain Queenan is Ellerby (Alec Baldwin, in another of this movie's smallish roles that is eaten alive by its actor Baldwin gives Wahlberg a run for his money as comic relief scene-stealer). Amongst the battle-scarred veterans, Scorcese chose wisely to insert a "new" beautiful face as female lead - Vera Farmiga, as police psychoanalyst, Madolyn, who moves in with Sullivan and then begins an affair with Costigan (nice!), setting up a tangential triangle which might have obscured the larger criminal drama in a lesser director's hands, but otherwise only served to verify that old saw, "chicks dig bad guys."
Sullivan is a policeman, sure, but as a mole for Costello he is inherently a Bad Guy whether Madolyn knows this or not, she is drawn to his duplicity and callousness. Costigan, though also a cop, is so deep undercover that the street is rubbing off on him in ways that make Madolyn's pants-suit pants moist - once again, no medals for figuring why she prescribes him "private therapy."
*The Departed* is unmistakably Scorcese, with all the classic Scorcese stamps; his characteristic camera moves, angles and smash-cutting; foreboding or calming source music juxtaposed over contrary visuals, and pulling a depth of performance from his actors that must take them places in their heads they never want to visit again without an attorney.
Selling Leo as a hard case in Scorcese's *Gangs of New York* was mildly obtuse; here, in their third collaboration, DiCaprio is steaming with mental muscle, street smarts and a spring-wound temper that turbo-charges his screen presence like no other role he has ever attacked. Not only might it be one of *his* best performances on film, the same can be said of Nicholson, whose conniving and ruthless Costello seems always to be on the verge of either welcoming you as a brother or snapping your spine and appending a pun.
Re-made from a recent Hong Kong movie *Mou gaan dou* (*Infernal Affairs*, 2002) (written by Felix Chong and Siu Fai Mak and directed by Mak and Wai Keung Lau), it is a slight annoyance that Scorcese would insult his audience by performing that patronizing surgical act of re-rendering foreign art for the Great American Unwashed; on the other hand, *The Departed* (screenplayed by William Monahan) stands extremely tall on its own merit, not exuding that alarmist *stanque* of "remake" (*Oliver Twist*) or worse, "bad remake" (*Fun with Dick and Jane*) or worse still, "pointless remake" (*Psycho*).
Whereas Scorcese's *Goodfellas* showed us the world through the eyes of only bad fellas, *The Departed* slews its camera over the wrong AND the right side of the law, graying the line between honor and justice and law and order with its complex layers of hypocrisy. Among thieves, among cops alike, we see honor and duplicity and lawlessness and order.
The worlds are exactly the same. But the chicks dig the bad guys.
(Movie Maniacs, visit: poffysmoviemania.com)
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