SO-SO-FELLAS : Ridley Scott's 'American Gangster' [5/10] : [for Tribune] Print E-mail
Sunday, 11 November 2007
in the white city : poster art for 'American Gangster' featuring R.Crowe

American Gangster
USA 2007

Starring : Denzel Washington, Russell Crowe
Director : Ridley Scott
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FEW recent Hollywood productions have had so 'troubled' a history as ambitious crime-saga American Gangster, which at various stages over the past half-decade was supposed to be directed by Brian De Palma, then Antoine Fuqua (Training Day), then Terry George (Hotel Rwanda) - before ending up under the auspices of the ever-erratic Ridley Scott (in the wake of disastrous "comedy" A Good Year.) This was all forgotten, however, when the film scored a crackerjack opening-weekend at North American box-offices, many observers suggesting that Scott might, at his fourth attempt, win the Best Director Oscar - although, as with Martin Scorsese's The Departed, it would ironic indeed to be so honoured for such an undeserving movie.

On paper, American Gangster has the makings of a 21st-century epic: 156-minute running-time; charismatic leads; top-drawer crew. And the plot (loosely based on Mark Jacobson's lengthy magazine-article) is packed with potential and incident as we follow the career of 1970s Harlem's most successful drug-lord crime-kingpin, Frank Lucas (Washington). We're shown how he deployed sharp business acumen to conquer an institutionally-racist drug-industry dominated by strongly-entrenched (white) players, and how he was eventually brought to justice via the dogged diligence of uncorruptable cop Richie Roberts (Crowe).

On film, however, and despite Washington's commandingly-charismatic best efforts, American Gangster keeps falling flat: Crowe is miscast, and Steven Zaillian's screenplay, though by no means without incidental pleasures, never coheres into a properly propulsive narrative. As he blunders around the kind of thematic and/or geographical terrain previously traversed by Scorsese (GoodFellas), Coppola (The Godfather) De Palma (Carlito's Way) and Mann (Heat), Scott's basic directorial limitations become increasingly apparent - likewise his evident lack of 'feel' for the sprawling material. And there's ample time for us to be distracted by the countless, careless errors of period-detail, from the glaringly anachronistic graffiti to the way the characters' hair, clothes and makeup never look quite right. Only in the last half hour or so - when the full oppportunistic audacity of Lucas's schemes becomes apparent - do things really start to pick up. But by then it's much too little, much too late.

Neil Young
written for the next issue of Tribune magazine

links to official site

AMERICAN GANGSTER : [5/10] : USA 07 : Ridley SCOTT : 157 mins (BBFC)
seen at Vue cinema, Leicester : 6th Oct : press show (Cinemadays event)

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