johnny depp Archive

Depp shoots, scores in ‘Public Enemies’

 

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Michael Mann’s Public Enemies is an unconventional and thrillingly executed biopic of John Dillinger, the bank robber who became something of a folk hero during the Great Depression. The film is another one of Mann’s men-at-work pieces, with a very narrow focus and no pretension to larger meanings. I can’t say I learned a whole lot about who Dillinger was, except that he knew how to live and die with a lot of style.

It opens with one of Mann’s greatest set pieces: a prison break in Indiana. The way this sequence unfolds – establishing where the characters are, where they need to get to, and why some of them don’t get there – makes it clear from the outset that we’re in the hands of a master.

The narrative focuses on Dillinger’s love affair with Billie Frechette (Oscar winner Marion Cotillard, in a nice English language debut), the coat-check girl he thought he would grow old with. It isn’t exactly the greatest love story ever told, which may explain the blunted emotional impact of the final scene.

This is a filmmaker whose work, starting with 1999’s The Insider, has grown increasingly weird. His experiments with story structure and digital video have never been more evident than in Public Enemies. All of the physical details of the Midwest in the 1930s are correct – the desolate country roads, the fedoras, the tommy guns – but they’re presented in shaky-cam HD. The effect is disorienting and unaccountably beautiful.

The look of the film is Mann’s most successful experiment, but some of his other choices are bewildering. A subplot involving a train robbery masterminded by Alvin Karpis (Giovanni Ribisi, a Mann’s man if there ever was one) is simply dropped. And the director plays fast and loose with historical details. For instance, Baby Face Nelson (Stephen Graham, in a memorably unhinged performance) died after Dillinger, not before.

But I found myself forgiving most of the film’s shortcomings. The shoot-outs are nothing short of exhilarating – as broadly staged and colorful as anything in Zack Snyder’s Watchmen. And the performances are mostly gangbusters (Billy Crudup has never been better as the effete, merciless J. Edgar Hoover); though after The Dark Knight, Terminator: Salvation and now this, I’m starting to find Christian Bale a little dull. Whatever happened to the chainsaw-wielding maniac in American Psycho?

Depp is charisma personified in this role. His best scene comes when Dillinger, at the height of a nationwide manhunt, simply strolls into the “Dillinger Squad” of the Chicago Police Department and asks the cops what the score of a baseball game is. That may have been the key to John Dillinger, which this ravishing, single-minded film only infrequently captures: he made refusing to play by the rules look all too easy.

‘Fear and Loathing’ - Buy the Ticket, Take the Ride

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I thought Terry Gilliam’s The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassas was supposed to come out last week. According to Wikipedia, its “projected theatrical release date is June 6, 2009.” That’s last Saturday, which doesn’t make much sense in retrospect. Anyway, when it didn’t open, I needed my Gilliam fix. So I decided to revisit Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.

I hadn’t seen it in years, but I remembered liking it. It’s one of those movies where half the people get up and walk out of the room, while the other half stay glued to their seats. The first 40 minutes are a lot of fun, but then things turn sour. I think that’s a good metaphor for heavy drug use: Fun at first, then no fun at all.

Johhny Depp is ideally cast in the role of Raoul Duke, the hero of Hunter S. Thompson’s 1971 cult novel. Ostensibly in town to cover the Mint 500 motorcycle race, Duke spends most of his time hiding out in hotel rooms on the Las Vegas strip and taking copious amounts of recreational drugs, like LSD and mescaline. Along for the ride is Dr. Gonzo, Duke’s “rotten attorney,” played by a bloated version of Benicio del Toro.

Drugs are all there is to this movie; they dictate both style and content. The motorcycle race is reduced to a single sequence, which Gilliam films like a Mad Max movie. The rest is all about what drugs Duke and Gonzo are on, what effects the drugs are having, and which crazy person they’re with. Part of the fun of Fear and Loathing is all the cameo appearances. Here’s Tobey Maguire in a fright wig! There’s Penn Gillette as a carnie! Did Lyle Lovett just ask me if I wanted some LSD? Why is Christina Ricci painting portraits of Barbara Streisand?!?

Like every Terry Gilliam movie, Fear and Loathing is a wondrous technical achievement, at once beautiful and ugly to look at. Certainly it’s the most realistic drug film since Roger Corman dropped acid and directed The Trip (1967). It’s also entirely hilarious. At one point, Gonzo spills a salt shaker filled with coke and says, “Jesus! Did you see what God just did to us man?” There’s also an amazing, make-you-throw-up-from-laughing scene in which Depp has an orange towel around his head and Del Toro is faking his own death in the background. The film is a comedy, but you can’t accuse Gilliam of glorifying this lifestyle, not when he includes a money shot of vomit splattering a toilet bowl.

It’s great to see this director working in a non-fantastical realm, applying his bag of tricks to the freak show that is Las Vegas. As Raoul Duke says, “It’s the American dream come true, pure Horatio Alger.”

I looked up the release date for The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassu and it doesn’t open until September. Check out this amazing still from the film, which features Heath Ledger’s final performance…

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