'Gangster' plows familiar ground in superb fashion
So perhaps "American Gangster," Ridley Scott's much-anticipated mobster epic, doesn't have a single original idea in its head, with its unshakable shades of "Scarface" and "Serpico" and "Superfly." And maybe it's a half-hour too long — this time of year, what film with awards ambitions isn't?
But it's exceptionally crafted and superbly acted, with the on-screen combo of Denzel Washington and Russell Crowe unsurprisingly proving impossible to resist, even though it takes about two hours for their paths to cross.
That's one of the more compelling elements of the film, written by veteran Steven Zaillian ("Schindler's List") and based on a New York magazine article by Mark Jacobson. Washington, as real-life heroin kingpin Frank Lucas, and Crowe, as detective Richie Roberts, are on a collision course with one another that's bursting with the gritty period atmosphere of 1970s Harlem.
Washington simply radiates as Frank, returning comfortably to the charismatic bad-guy territory that earned him an Academy Award in "Training Day." And Crowe is just as powerful as the bulldog on the right side of the law.
That their characters' personalities are such complete opposites may be a bit too obvious, as is the fact that they clearly share a rigid moral code. Both men inhabit their roles so fully, though, they make such shortcomings easy to overlook.
After toiling loyally for years as the driver to distinguished gang lord Ellsworth "Bumpy" Johnson, Frank steps in and takes over the neighborhood after the old man's death. A North Carolina native, he is nattily attired and exceedingly polite, even as he shoots a rival in the head on the sidewalk in broad daylight.
Tired of relying on Mafia middle men to help him import the drugs he will eventually sell on the street, he just flies to Thailand and finds a way to bring back the heroin on his own. He then cuts it twice as strong for half the price, names it Blue Magic and earns both a rabid following and the envy of his competition.
That includes the corrupt New York cops who are accustomed to taking their slice of the pie, led by a swaggering, perfectly cast Josh Brolin.
At the same time, Richie can't seem to do anything right. He finds sacks full of money stashed in the trunk of a car — clearly another cop's ill-gotten gains — and turns them in, knowing that doing so will make him a pariah among his peers.
He focuses intensely on his job as a narcotics detective and ends up driving away his ex-wife and young son.
But he works relentlessly, hungrily — a trait that will serve him well even before he realizes he's looking for Frank. All he knows at first is that his partner has died of an overdose, and he's curious about the source of the drugs. And he begins asking around about this mysterious community leader in Harlem, this Robin Hood in a fur coat.
Scott steadily propels both men's stories toward one another until the tantalizing moment when they finally meet.
Then all falls silent and still.
FILM FACTS
TITLE: “American Gangster”
CAST: Denzel Washington,
Russell Crowe, Ruby Dee,
Lymari Nadal, Chiwetel Ejiofor,
Cuba Gooding Jr. and
Josh Brolin
DIRECTOR: Ridley Scott
RATED: Rated R for
intense sequences of graphic
brutal violence, and for language
GRADE: ***½ (out of 5)
