City Hall Movie Review
City Hall Review

"City Hall" Overview

Rating: R
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Harold BeckerProducer : Edward R. Pressman,Ken Lipper,Charles Mulvehill,Harold Becker
Screenwiter : Ken Lipper,Paul Schrader,Nicholas Pileggi,Bo Goldman
Starring : Al Pacino,John Cusack,Bridget Fonda,Danny Aeillo,David Paymer,Martin Landau
There's two things I dislike: politics and long, boring speeches. City Hall
has plenty of both, and while Al Pacino is almost cool enough to make me think
politics can be okay, it's got so many long speeches that I started looking for
the remote control after the third or fourth one.
City Hall is a drama/thriller with most of the thrill sucked out of it. After
a ridiculously convoluted opening, filled with the weak voice-over of the
Deputy Mayor of New York City, Kevin Calhoun (John Cusack), we find ourselves
embroiled in the world of Mayor John Pappas (Pacino). As the film opens, we
find a cop and mobster killed in a shoot-out, taking with them the life of a
six-year old boy.
The ensuing investigation turns up evidence of corruption in the judicial
system, focusing on Judge Walter Stern (Martin Landau, whose talents are wasted
here) and in politics, with show tune-singing official Frank Anselmo (Danny
Aiello) under the gun. Helping Calhoun in his inquiries is attorney Marybeth
Cogan (Bridget Fonda, also wasted, but with a cool haircut)--with whom he
develops the requisite love interest.
City Hall has all the elements of a great film except one: a script. Four
writers worked on the film, and that was obviously three too many. As a
result, the storyline is completely limp. There's no suspense at all, and
you'll see the one measly plot twist coming a mile away (not that it makes any
sense, just that it's obvious).
And oddly, the remainder of the film is superbly crafted. The ensemble cast is
nearly flawless, especially Cusack as the go-for-it right-hand man who has no
life outside the Mayor's Office. And after almost two hours, Al Pacino really
is the Mayor of NYC. The cityscapes of New York are awesome on the big screen,
as well, and the witty humor that punctuates the film does a good job at
relieving the tedium from watching the film's lifeless story.
Bottom line: with all this talent, I was expecting a whole lot more.
Pacino swears to tell the truth: the movie just ain't that great.
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Review by Christopher Null
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