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American Gangster Movie Review
American Gangster Review

"American Gangster" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Ridley ScottProducer : Brian Grazer
Screenwiter : Steve Zallian
Starring Denzel Washington, Russell Crowe, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Josh Brolin, Lymari Nadal, Ted Levine, Rza, Armand Assante, Cuba Gooding Junior, Common, Warren Miller, John Hawkes, Idris Elba, Kevin Corrigan, Ruby Dee, Carla Gugino, Jon Polito
There's something dead in Denzel Washington's eyes nearly all of the way
through Ridley Scott's American Gangster, which takes what should have been a
mesmerizing slice of urban historical grit and grinds it into roughly two hours
of standard issue cinema. Washington is playing Frank Lucas, a real-life crime
boss who for a period lasting from the late 1960s into the following decade,
ran Manhattan "from 110th to 155th, river to river." A real slick character who
doesn't need to strut his worth on the street, Lucas hates flash like a junkie
hates rehab: It reminds him of all he truly is but doesn't want to be. Facing
off against him is New Jersey narc Richie Roberts (Russell Crowe), a womanizing
tough guy with a short fuse but a heart of gold (aren't they all), who's so
clean that when he and his partner come across $1 million in untraceable cash
he had the bad manners to turn it all in without taking a single bill for
himself. In a big-city police department in the 1970s, boy scout behavior like
that will just plain get you killed -- the guy who's not on the take is the guy
who could very well sell you down the river when the grand jury comes sniffing
around for who is on the take.
Ridley Scott has a good thing going here, tossing these two Hollywood bigshots
into the ring and letting them play cops and robbers while he slathers on the
period detail with a trowel. There's some serious Superfly outfits (including a
godawful $50,000 chinchilla coat that plays a surprisingly key part in a plot
twist), a generous helping of soul music, enough fantastic character actors to
choke a horse (Idris Elba, Jon Polito, Kevin Corrigan, an incredibly sleazy
Josh Brolin, and so on), the specter of Vietnam playing on every television in
sight, and the odd enjoyment one gets from watching cops in the
pre-militarized, pre-SWAT days take down an apartment with just revolvers, the
occasional shotgun, and a sledgehammer to whack down the door. Scott's smart
enough to let the story cohere organically and without rush, keeping his main
contenders apart for as long as could possibly be borne, making them fully
developed characters in their own right and not just developed in opposition to
the other. But there's something in this broad and expansive tale that can't
quite come together, and it seems to start in Denzel's eyes.
Although the film is pretty evenly divided between the cop's and the robber's
stories as they come arcing toward each other, this is clearly the tale of
Frank Lucas (the movie's not called American Narcotics Detective), and as one
of the most notorious and fascinating gangsters in American history, Denzel
simply fails to deliver. Lucas was a country boy from the Carolinas who came up
to New York and worked as driver and bodyguard for revered and feared Harlem
crime lord Ellsworth "Bumpy" Johnson, one of the last of the great underworld
bosses. Bumpy taught Lucas everything he knew, so that when he died of a heart
attack in 1968, Lucas was ready to take the reins. He almost immediately upset
the apple cart (meaning the Mafia, who supplied drugs to Bumpy) by importing
heroin of an unheard-of purity straight from Southeast Asia and selling it for
cheaper than the competition, ultimately doing the criminally unthinkable by
becoming the Mafia's supplier. It's an astoundingly gutsy move, particularly
given the array of corrupt cops and Mafioso arrayed against him, but Denzel's
got Lucas' grim determination down cold, and the whole paradigm-shifting event
(which included secretly importing the heroin in the coffins of dead American
soldiers, an act pregnant with symbolic weight which Scott weirdly chooses to
gloss over) is easy to swallow.
It's the rest of the character which Denzel doesn't seem to get. Crowe shows
that whatever dry spell he may have been in is certainly over, and he will be
able to play conflicted hard-case heroes with superb élan until he's dragged
off the stage. But Denzel has a cold steeliness in his expression that rarely
wavers, only when he's seducing (in record time) his future wife Eva (Lymari
Nadal), doing good by his mother (like every bloodthirsty but sentimental movie
gangster does), or making threats. We know that Lucas hates showiness and the
police, loves efficiency and being his own boss, and trusts only his family --
he imports the whole clan from down South to run his operation -- but that's
about it. Frank Lucas seems to have been a fascinating person, it would be nice
to see a great movie about him.
Someone's overdressed.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti
This is one of the best films I've seen in recent years! I may like Russell
Crowe afterall & Denzel's outstanding, as always.
Great movie, as usual Denzel did an outstanding job, he continously excel in
everything he does.
Denzel do not change, because you are an awsome individual with your hansome
self, love ya.
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