Film Review
The real-life experiences of an undercover FBI agent are vividly retold
in this tense and compelling thriller from Mike Newell, the director
who previously had a box office smash with his romantic-comedy
Four Weddings and a Funeral
(1994). Regarded by some as the best gangster film since
The Godfather: Part II (1974),
Donnie Brasco offers not only
a gripping story that is powerfully evocative of the era and milieu in
which it is set, but some extraordinary performances from its two lead
actors, Al Pacino and Johnny Depp, who are both at their absolute best
as a disillusioned hard-bitten hoodlum and the undercover cop who falls
under his spell. The film is closely based on Pistone's 1988 book
Donnie Brasco: My Undercover Life in
the Mafia, and the fact that Pistone was a consultant on the
film (working closely with Pacino and Depp to define their characters)
can only add to its blistering authenticity.
Donnie Brasco is far more than
your run-of-the-mill gangster film. The central story idea about
an inexperienced cop who undergoes a personality change through his
exposure to hardened criminals is hardly an original one. What
the film is really about is the moral conflict which its protagonist
ultimately has to deal with when he is forced to choose between his
professional duties and his emotional attachment to a mobster he has
grown to like and respect. Is it possible for any man to stand by
and allow someone he has befriended be executed, even in the line of
duty? Pacino's character is far from sympathetic - repeatedly he
shows himself to be a seasoned killer with no scruples when it comes to
protecting himself and his kind - but we are compelled to feel for him
as Depp's undercover FBI agent slips off his moral pedestal and allows
him to be murdered, selling his soul for a derisory monetary reward and
a token gold disk.
Prior to
Donnie Brasco,
Johnny Depp's acting career had been a somewhat hit and miss
affair. Depp's determination to shake off his teen idol image led
him to make some bizarre choices of roles, and a fair number of
misfires was perhaps inevitable.
Donnie Brasco was the film which
convinced the world that he was genuinely a great film actor, and it
seems fitting that this revelation should come about through his
pairing with Al Pacino, a living legend whose acting abilities are
beyond dispute. A great actor isn't just one who can convincingly
take on another persona; more crucially, it is someone who can draw us
into his character's soul and make us feel the anxieties and torments
that make the character real, someone we have no choice but to engage
with, whether he is a saint or a psychopath. As they perform
alongside one another in
Donnie
Brasco, Pacino and Depp leave us in no doubt that they are two
of the finest in their trade.
It is hard to know which is more moving - the blind trust that Pacino's
Ruggiero places in Depp's Brasco, treating him more like a son than a
criminal partner (having swallowed the cop's lies hook, line and sinker), or the
crisis of conscience that begins to overtake
Depp's character when he realises what he has got himself into.
Mike Newell's gritty mise-en-scène has much to commend
it (as do the screenwriting and photography), but what makes this a
particularly moving and satisfying film is the intense humanity that
Pacino and Depp invest in their portrayals. The truly great
gangster films are not about blood and bullets; they are about human
beings coming to terms with the cost of the choices they have made in
their lives, whilst reminding us that there are no absolutes in
morality. Is it possible to regard Pistone as a hero once he has
told his story? Does he even expect to be seen as a hero? A
man who betrays his friend has many sleepless nights ahead of him.
Such a man is to be pitied, not revered.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In 1978, FBI agent Joseph D. Pistone is assigned his most dangerous
mission: to infiltrate the Bonanno family, one of New York's most
feared gangster clans. Posing as a crack diamond thief and
assuming the name Donnie Brasco, Pistone soon gains the confidence of
low-ranking gang member Lefty Ruggiero, who vouches for him and comes
to regard him as his own son. Lefty is the weakest link in the
Bonanno mob organisation, an ageing hitman who has a son dying from
drug addiction and a grudge against his superiors for repeatedly
passing him over for promotion. As he gradually gains the
approval of the other gang members, Pistone becomes more like them, a
transformation that is noticed by his wife, from whom he becomes
increasingly estranged. Pistone is soon drawn in so deeply that
his main worry is not that his cover will be blown, but that he will be
caught in the crossfire as the Bonannos go to war with a rival gang...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.