Mr. Untouchable Movie Review
Mr. Untouchable Review
"Mr. Untouchable" Overview

Rating:
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Marc LevinProducer : Alex Gibney,Jason Kliot,Mary-Jane Robinson,Joana Vicente
Screenwiter : Marc Levin
Starring : Leroy 'Nicky' Barnes,Thelma Grant,Carol Hawkins-Williams,Joseph Jazz Hayden,Leon Scrap Batts
It has to be the oddest situation of pointless one-upmanship imaginable. On the
one side is Frank Lucas, glamorized urban criminal and self-proclaimed king of
'70s Harlem heroin. His corporate, buttoned-down approach to people poisoning
would eventually become the source of cinematic legend, polished and de-fanged
by Ridley Scott and his soulless American Gangster. And on the other side is
Leroy "Nicky" Barnes, king pimp of the same paradigm. To hear him tell it (in
the insightful new documentary Mr. Untouchable), Lucas was an illiterate
Carolina boy who embarrassed himself on the streets of New York. Instead, it
was Barnes who created the mafia-subverting network of connections that would
lead a city to swelter in a decade long grip of addiction.
Why anyone would want to win this contest remains a concept outside the actual
narrative provided by filmmaker Marc Levin. With access to the actual figures
fictionalized in Scott's crime drama, as well as an unusual amount of openness
from said participants (most have done their time and are ready to rewrite
history), we get the seedier side of the Me Decade in the Big Apple. Barnes
describes his own pretend professionalism, taking credit for turning drug
dealing into an "above board" case of supply and demand. His associates discuss
their designer clothes, outlandish jewelry, and the lovely ladies that hung
from their arms like erotic accessories. Thanks to some incredible archival
footage, we witness the actual nude dope factories, bare-ass biz-natches
cutting and bagging the killer powder.
Though he's visible all throughout Untouchable, Barnes is apparently bashful
today. As part of his deal with the Witness Protection Program, he is only
viewed here through thick shadows and well placed camera framing. Hands
festooned with the trappings of wealth, and words laced with a less than
apologetic tone, this is a man who is proud of his accomplishments, who sees
nothing wrong in giving desperate, disenfranchised members of his own race the
keys to their own destruction. Even worse, the aforementioned marginalizing of
organized crime, the police, Lucas and his "gang," as well as all others who
purport to diminish his influence, get a philosophical dressing down. Barnes (a
version of whom does appear as part of Gangster in the less than imposing guise
of Cuba Gooding Jr.) wants it known that he was the true master of Manhattan.
Such bravado is fascinating -- at first.
Yet similar to Gangster's unrepentant tone, Mr. Untouchable feels more like a
celebration than an expose. While undeniably entertaining (many in Barnes'
sphere of influence have a quick witted slickness that's deceptively charming),
Levin's perspective is too passive. He's clearly going for a "let them hang
themselves" ideal, but these are men who made millions -- and spent a similar
amount -- in the hedonistic pleasures provided from the weakness of others. We
need some harsh criticizing, or at the very least, a dose of retrospective
reality. At least Scott had the moral compass to include that hackneyed montage
where a dead addict lies frozen, her clearly neglected child crying in P.S.A.
pain. Levin just lets his subjects brag, boast, and belittle.
Indeed, the vast majority of Mr. Untouchable focuses on what that moniker
insinuates. Barnes believes in his own myth, using the power and publicity from
30 years ago to constantly minimize his clear-cut culpability. Far more
engaging than this fall's often underwhelming epic, Levin wants the facts to be
as engaging as the standard cinematic crime story. Unfortunately, veracity is
not Barnes', or his buddies', strong suit. Like much of the story of Harlem in
the '70s, the truth is the least important part.
Naa naa naa naa can't touch me. Oh wait yes you can.
Reviewer: Bill Gibron



