Welcome to Collinwood Movie Review
Welcome to Collinwood Review

"Welcome to Collinwood" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Anthony Russo,Joe RussoProducer : George Clooney,Steven Soderbergh
Screenwiter : Anthony Russo,Joe Russo
Starring William H Macy, Isaiah Washington, Sam Rockwell, Michael Jeter, Luis Guzmn, Patricia Clarkson, Andrew Davoli, Jennifer Esposito, Gabrielle Union
Among the ever-impressive list of projects undertaken by Steven Soderbergh and
George Clooney's Section Eight production group (Ocean's Eleven, this year's
Insomnia), the ironically titled Welcome to Collinwood is one of the best.
Anthony and Joe Russo's lovable crime comedy, which boasts a talented comic
cast -- including Clooney himself, in a small but invaluable role -- is the
finest debut by a creative team since the Wachowski brothers (The Matrix) made
Bound.
Basing their premiere feature on the little-seen Italian comedy Big Deal on
Madonna Street (1958), the writing, directing Russos set their film -- a finely
tuned, brilliantly designed, screwball romp -- in the Ohio city of the title,
which they've drawn as decrepit, to say the least. Collinwood is painted as low
rent, low wage, and low class, where every sidewalk square is cracked and so
are the people that walk on them.
In dim, dingy Collinwood, two-bit thief Cosimo (the quietly manic Luis Guzmán)
is locked in the clink, dressed in black-and-white stripes, and sitting on a
secret: There's a fortune buried behind a building in town. Cosimo can get his
share on the "bellini" -- a once-in-a-lifetime deal -- but needs to find
someone willing to confess to his crime and do his time -- that's a
"mullinsky." The creation of this ethnically based slang is one of the more
genius touches of the script.
So Cosimo's girl, Rosalind (Patricia Clarkson, playing the tough moll
perfectly) hits the streets to offer $15,000 to whomever will play the
mullinsky. But loose lips sink Cosimo's plans, and before you can say "keep it
on the QT," a merry band of wackos all want in on the big bellini.
The cast that makes up that rogues gallery is superb in the film: Isaiah
Washington, affecting all manner of class and manners as Leon; William H. Macy
as Riley, frustrated by his wife's imprisonment, and protective of the cute
baby on his back; Andrew Davoli, playing Basil as a young scruffy dreamer in
love with Leon's sister; Michael Jeter, turning old-timer Toto into a raspy,
bumbling knucklehead; and, as the charming Pero, the exceptional Sam Rockwell,
using such a wide array of comic gifts -- line delivery, physicality, timing --
that a strong case can be made for sending an Oscar nomination his way come
early next year.
Even when the Russos add more characters to the mix, like Jennifer Esposito's
innocent immigrant girl, a maid who holds the key (literally) to the fortune,
everyone stays in the midst of the action. A subplot between Pero and the girl
adds such delightful heart and humor to the tale, but we never feel as if the
Russos have forgotten about the rest of the hapless crew. Add in a couple of
brilliant scenes with producer Clooney as a shell-shocked safecracker, and this
film is almost constant fun.
By designing the downtrodden Collinwood with a timeless feel -- it might be the
1930s, but it might be today -- the Russos inject their goofy caper tale with a
Dead End Kids kind of charm from the get-go. They then let their superlative,
classically styled script and inspired cast work the kind of magic seen in the
American comedies of yesteryear.
While the final act loses a little edge and pace, so much more makes up for
it. Anthony and Joe Russo have created a zippy, enormously entertaining heist
movie that, with a kind heart at its core, encompasses the styles of yesterday,
today, and if we're lucky, maybe even tomorrow.
Who's gotta go?
Reviewer: Norm Schrager





