Gangster Squad. Rated MA 15+ (strong violence and coarse
language). 113 minutes. Directed
by Ruben Fleischer. Screenplay by Will Beall. Based on the novel by Paul
Lieberman.
Verdict: Gangsters by the numbers eventually suffers from a
serious case of bullet fatigue.
When the ruthless mobster Mickey
Cohen (Sean Penn) decides to make Los Angeles his base, a squad of undercover
operatives, led by Sgt. John O'Mara (Josh Brolin), are given permission by the
city’s Chief of Police (Nick Nolte) to bring Cohen’s burgeoning reign of terror
to end by whatever means are necessary.
Plagued by the killings
inside a Colorado movie theatre and the more recent slaying of 20 children and
six adults at an elementary school in Connecticut, it is difficult to know how
to begin to appreciate a film that purports to be nothing more than a
monumental shoot-em-up extravaganza.
Quite apart from the
bullet-induced fatigue that sets in about half way through this mercilessly
violent gun fest, Gangster Squad’s artful,
film noir pretensions are short-changed by Fleischer and Beall’s steadfast
determination to provide nothing even remotely new or particularly interesting
to the celebrated ‘gangster movie’ genre. The granddaddy of them all – The
Godfather (1972) – casts a long,
vastly superior shadow over every attempt to make an involving gangster flick,
and this film’s over-reliance on weaponry galore as opposed to any kind of meaningful
character development, results in a less-than-satisfying experience.
What is impressive,
however, is production designer Maher Ahmad’s glorious recreation of Los
Angeles in the 1940s, Mary Zophres’s (True Grit, Iron Man 2, A Serious Man)
perfect costumes, and the work of Australian-born cinematographer Dion Beebe’s
(Green Lantern, Memoirs of a
Geisha, Chicago) who captures the evocative, richly-illuminated
world in which the story unfolds perfectly.
Buried deep within all the
gun-toting are some interesting performances – particularly from Emma Stone as
the wanna-be actress trapped in Cohen’s vicious world, and Mireille Enos as
O’Mara’s pregnant wife Connie who helps her husband put ‘the squad’ together
with a wonderful lightness of touch. From the first scene, an over made-up Penn
sails well over the top and stays there, while Brolin and the rest of the squad
(including Ryan Gosling) all end up being little more than stylish,
well-meaning and equally well-dressed caricatures.
This review was commissioned by the Geraldton Newspaper Group.
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