Yonkers Joe Movie Review
Yonkers Joe Review
"Yonkers Joe" Overview

Rating: R
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Robert CelestinoProducer : Trent Othick
Screenwiter : Robert Celestino
Starring : Chazz Palminteri,Christine Lahti,Tom Guiry,Michael Lerner,Linus Roache,Michael Rispoli,Roma Maffia,Frank John Hughes,Arthur J. Nascarella,Saverio Guerra
Making a film about a scam artist is probably a lot like being one -- no matter
how solid an idea seems, it's really all about the execution. The life of a
cheat lends itself to high drama and conflict, but it can also be riddled with
clichés. Throw in a mentally disabled son and a shot at the big score, and
you've got a combination of storylines so obvious, they seem destined to fail.
But Yonkers Joe doesn't fail. It's a spunky little indie that succeeds past its
cheap conventions.
Both the credit and the blame go to writer-director Robert Celestino. His
cornball plot shouldn't work, but his direction, especially with actors, does.
Chazz Palminteri (Celestino's executive producer) is the title guy, a gambling
stiff with an amazing ability to cheat crap games. He'll belly up to a table,
pull some David Blaine-like moves to drop tainted dice into a game, and make a
fortune. Unfortunately, Atlantic City security has his number, and private
games are too small for his ambitions.
Enter Joe's 19-year-old mentally challenged son, Joe Jr. (Tom Guiry), staying
with Dad after being booted from assisted living for being crude and violent.
If Joe Sr.. can't straighten Junior out -- or make enough cash to pay for an
alternative -- his gambling lifestyle will be seriously impeded. But if Joe can
pull off one giant payday in Vegas…
You get the picture. Despite all the seen-it-before ideas, Yonkers Joe feels
just a little different. Palminteri, an actor who telegraphs the "tough guy"
image too often, softens here and lets his age (56) work for him, conveying a
good sense of last-chance desperation and an inability to change. He's thinner
and more wrinkled than in, say, The Usual Suspects, looking like a guy who's
suffered too many bad bets, too many lonely nights.
He's countered well by Guiry, who understands that his rougher, more ridiculous
lines ("Suck on a bowl of cocks!") are meant to deliver comic relief without
cheating Joe Jr.'s intensity. Unfortunately, Guiry's performance is poorly
timed; any able-minded actor playing a retarded character will now be judged by
the infamous "Never go full retard" recommendation offered in Tropic Thunder.
That said, I can't comment on whether someone of Joe Jr.'s intellect would
react with the actions and comments we see here.
But suspending disbelief is not a problem with Yonkers Joe. You'll need it to
get caught up in the assorted sleight-of-hand scams from swapping cards to
palming dice. Celestino pulls back the curtain for us and never goes too far in
explaining a scenario, letting Palminteri and buddy Michael Lerner chit-chat
with their cheaters' lingo. It's all clear once the game's afoot.
Celestino is to be commended for keeping Yonkers Joe moving, with just a touch
of awkwardness that balances out some run-of-the-mill dialogue. But his
greatest achievement is in casting Christine Lahti as Joe's friend Janice. With
honest and pursed-lip strength, Lahti reminds us how important she can be to a
film, with a performance that recalls her achievement in Sidney Lumet's Running
on Empty more than 20 years ago.
If you can watch Yonkers Joe without thinking it's a mild Rain Man rip-off,
you'll enjoy a film that could have been plagued with plot issues, but rises
above it. Hey, sometimes it's a crap shoot.
Let's get this bus going. Wapner's coming on.
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Review by Norm Schrager
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