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Cast and Credits
Ridley Scott (Director)
Russell Crowe (Detective Richie Roberts)
Denzel Washington (Frank Lucas)
Josh Brolin (Detective Trupo)
Common (Turner Lucas)
Ted Levine (Lou Toback)
John Ortiz (Javy Rivera)
Yul Vazquez D(etective Alphonse Abruzzo)
J. Kyle Manzay (Dexter Lucas)
Roger Guenveur (Smith Nate)
Robert Funaro (McCann)
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American Gangster is
the commercially ambitious undertaking of Oscar-winning
moviemakers aiming for classic gangster storytelling.
The result is a Tinsel-town worthy tale that doesn't
create the indelible crime portrait it so eagerly wants
to paint. Based on 2000 New York magazine article The
Return of Superfly by Mark Jacobson, film follows, from
1968-1975, the true story Shakespearian-like rise and
fall of Frank Lucas, a North Carolina native turned
Harlem drug kingpin and Detective Richie Roberts
(mysteriously never mentioned in Jacobson’s source
article?), the straight cop obsessed with bringing down
Lucas' dope supplying empire.
Story intro finds Lucas
(Denzel Washington, Training Day) mourning the death of
his legendary crime boss mentor Bumpy Johnson. After
watching newscasts from Vietnam of American soldiers
using inexpensive, and highly potent, Asian heroin,
Lucas develops an enterprising strategy to reinvent the
drug's supply pipeline. He travels to the poppy growing
fields of Southeast Asia's Golden Triangle to broker
direct distribution from growers, shrewdly subjugating
the mafia's French connection suppliers. His trademark
100% pure Blue Magic dope costs half as much as the
competition's, is twice as good, and makes him
attention-grabbing rich.
Along with the mafia,
Detective Roberts (Russell Crowe, Gladiator) is consumed
with Lucas. He is a flawed hero cop that will stop at
nothing to bring the business savvy, family oriented
Lucas down.
Director Ridley Scott's
(Gladiator) striving saga drapes the screen with
abundant, though superficial, 1970's period-piece
devices. It's an homage of sorts to rugged early 1970's
antihero crime movies (think The French Connection
(1971), Superfly (1972), Black Caesar (1973), Serpico
(1973) ) that had audiences ducking inside theaters to
witness gritty NYC detectives chasing drug kingpins and
crooked cops. These street tough movies blurred cop and
criminal morality lines and inspired the derivative
American Gangster. Alas, the businesslike Gangster
doesn't radiate enough charge to be memorable, allowing
its binding energy to reveal a respectable, but tame,
movie less than the sum of its professionally written,
produced, directed, and acted parts.
The film finds
Washington and Crowe delivering incongruous
performances. Washington is rousing as the high powered
Lucas, though not award caliber. His performance and
screen presence, while captivating, are too refined to
convince that he is an illiterate and uneducated North
Carolina country boy. Surprisingly, Crowe is lackluster
here, never wrapping his arms around the policeman’s
stereotypically distressed private life in a way that
energizes the resolute cop or justifies its laborious
equal time portrayal. When the film hits its crescendo
one time meeting between Washington and Crowe (they
appeared together in Virtuosity, 1995) after the
two-hour mark, the face-to-face showdown is anemic
thanks in large part to a hiccup in pacing and
ineffectual editing. Like Heat (Robert De Niro and Al
Pacino, 1995), the much anticipated scene, between two
movie stars at the peak of their respective powers, is
filmed with deflating intersecting cut away shots not
allowing the stars to trade fire in the same camera
frame.
Supporting standouts
are Ruby Dee's (Jungle Fever) disapproving Mama Lucas
and the scene stealing Josh Brolin's (No Country For Old
Men) debauched Det. Trupo.
--
Louis Boram (
2 1/2 out of 4 pops )
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