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Gangster Squad (2013)

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Directed byRuben Fleischer

Produced byBruce Berman
Ruben Fleischer
Dan Lin
Kevin McCormick
Jon Silk
Michael Tadross

Screenplay byWill Beall

Based onTales from the Gangster Squad
by Paul Lieberman

StarringJosh Brolin
Ryan Gosling
Sean Penn
Nick Nolte
Emma Stone
Anthony Mackie
Giovanni Ribisi
Michael Peña
Robert Patrick

Music bySteve Jablonsky

CinematographyDion Beebe

Editing byAlan Baumgarten
James Herbert

Studio






  • Village Roadshow Pictures
    Lin Pictures

    6.7/10-IMDb
    40%-Metacritic


    PLOT


    In 1949 Los Angeles, gangster Mickey Cohen (Sean Penn) wants to control all organized crime, arguing with local mobster Jack Dragna that they should not allow the East coastMafia to run the town.
    Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) detective John "Sarge" O'Mara (Josh Brolin) busts into a Cohen brothel to save a woman, newly arrived to Hollywood, from Cohen's thugs. Chief Bill Parker (Nick Nolte), impressed that O'Mara had knowingly raided a Cohen operation – and aware that O'Mara has special operations background and training at Camp X during World War II – tasks O'Mara to wage guerrilla warfare against Cohen, and appoints him to choose a small team that must work in anonymity, with no badges and no LAPD support.
    O'Mara's pregnant wife Connie (Mireille Enos) suggests choosing unorthodox veterans like himself, as young high-performers are probably already on Cohen's payroll. With Connie helping him to review personnel files, O'Mara selects a small squad of cops: Coleman Harris (Anthony Mackie) is a black cop who wants to cut off the heroin flow toCentral Avenue, wiretapper and family man Conway Keeler (Giovanni Ribisi) wants his son to know that he fought to make a difference, old timer and gunslinger/sharpshooter Max Kennard (Robert Patrick) and his young Hispanic partner Navidad "Christmas" Ramirez (Michael Peña) do not fit in well with the regular force and want in.
    O'Mara fails in an attempt to recruit Sgt Jerry Wooters (Ryan Gosling), a detective who prefers to do the minimum in his daily job. Wooters keeps in touch with childhood friendJack Whalen (Sullivan Stapleton), an informant with some connections to Cohen. Grace Faraday (Emma Stone) is Cohen's etiquette coach and girlfriend. Wooters and Grace begin a secret romantic relationship, protected by a reluctant Whalen.
    The squad raids an illegal Cohen casino in Burbank, but are confronted by corrupt Burbank cops. O'Mara and Harris are captured and held in the Burbank jail for pickup by Cohen's gang. When Wooters witnesses a young friend/shoeshine boy gunned down when Cohen's gang botches an attack on boss Dragna, he decides to help Kennard and Ramirez to free the other two from the Burbank jail and join the squad.
    With information from an illegal bug that they place in Cohen's house, the squad makes several successful blows at the heart of Cohen's criminal organization. The media refers to them as "The Gangster Squad". Keeler's expertise allows the squad to deduce the location of Cohen's significant wire gambling business, the heart of his empire. The squad successfully burns down the business, but Cohen's men inform him that they didn't take any of his money. Cohen finally realizes that they must be a group of honest cops, rather than thugs from mob boss Dragna trying to takeover his business. Cohen believes someone betrayed him and wired his house, causing Grace to run away fearing Cohen might know of her relationship with Wooters.
    Feeding false information to the bug in his house, Cohen is able to lure the Gangster Squad into a trap in Chinatown. Wooters takes Grace to Whalen to get her out of town, and learns about the ambush—he rushes to Chinatown just in time to alert the rest of the squad.
    While the Chinatown ambush is being thwarted, Cohen is hitting a number of other locations. Cohen's bodygurad has found Keeler's listening post and kills him. Cohen arrives at Whalen's looking for Grace (who hides and watches), and kills him. O'Mara's house is hit by a drive-by, and Connie gives birth to their son under the stress.
    Grace tells Wooters she is willing to testify against Cohen regarding Whalen's murder, prompting O'Mara and the surviving squad members to arrest Cohen at his heavily guarded Park Plaza Hotel. A long firefight breaks out, with Wooters being wounded in the process of killing the Cohen thug who had killed the shoeshine boy. O'Mara pursues Cohen and his bodyguard down the block, where the bodyguard gets the jump and is about to kill O'Mara. An injured Kennard, with his dying breath, manages to sharpshoot Cohen's bodyguard from a block away, saving O'Mara. O'Mara and former prize-fighter Cohen come to fisticuffs. As a crowd of onlookers and journalists gather, O'Mara defeats Cohen and has him arrested.
    As they'd been told, the Gangster Squad is never credited in taking down Cohen. Grace's testimony ensures Cohen is sentenced to 25 to life at Alcatraz, where he is welcomed violently by Whalen's friends. Grace and Wooters stay together and he stays on the force, while Ramirez and Harris stay on and become partners on the beat. O'Mara quits to live a quiet life in Los Angeles with Connie and their son.


    REVIEW

    You may have noticed that the trailers for "Gangster Squad" are peppered with hyperbolic review quotes provided by syndicated critics of dubious merit. They're a sure sign of a movie's mediocrity, and my favorite blurb hypes "Gangster Squad" as "the best gangster film of the decade!!" Man, what a drag. If that's true, the next seven years are going to be lousy for the world's favorite crime genre.
    To be fair, this tawdry dose of pulp fiction ("inspired by real events") is not a complete waste of time. It offers the marginal pleasure of an all-star cast slumming their way through a thicket of routine plotting, almost laughable dialogue and the constant blaze of tommy guns. The latter also resulted in a postponed release: A scene involving machine guns in a movie theater was cut after last year's tragic "The Dark Knight Rises" multiplex killings in Aurora, Colorado, and other scenes were rewritten and re-shot to fill gaps in the narrative.
    Not that it mattered much. No amount of tinkering could repair the film's tonal inconsistencies. A comedy specialist stepping into semi-dramatic territory, director Ruben Fleischer scored a modest hit with 2009's giddy, satirical "Zombieland" (he is currently filming a sequel), and delivered plenty of laughs on TV, directing segments of HBO's "Funny or Die Presents" and working with Jimmy Kimmel, Zach Galifianakis, Michael Cera and Will Ferrell, among others.
    In "Gangster Squad," however, Fleischer seems out of his element. His film has the familiar look and feel of a gangster classic, with plenty of dark, burnished hardwoods, shiny vintage cars and meticulous attention to period details of costume, architecture and interior design. Cinematographer Dion Beebe, who earned an Oscar for his work on "Memoirs of a Geisha" (and was nominated for "Chicago"), bathes "Gangster Squad" in a rich palette of smoky shadows and dazzling night-life opulence. Yet for all the production's post-war gloss and moody atmosphere, you still get the sense that Fleischer is barely suppressing an urge to spoof the genre.
    It's late 1949, and as the holidays approach, former-boxer-turned-Chicago-mobster Mickey Cohen (Sean Penn) has expanded Meyer Lansky's Jewish mafia to Los Angeles, where's he's planning to monopolize drugs and gambling and squeeze his bosses out of the equation. He means business, too: As the movie opens, Cohen sends a message to Chicago by chaining one of Lansky's soldiers between two revving sedans and pulling him apart like a bloody croissant.
    Early on, there's still hope that "Gangster Squad" might at least aspire to the crackling volatility of "L.A. Confidential," the brash brutality of "Mulholland Falls," the verbal and visual eloquence of "Miller's Crossing" or the classy opulence of Barry Levinson's "Bugsy" (partially set in nearly the the same place and time, and featuring Harvey Keitel as Cohen). That's just wishful thinking. If anything, "Gangster Squad" is an "Untouchables" wanna-be, as Irish LAPD sergeant John O'Mara (Josh Brolin) is given carte blanche orders by incorruptible LAPD Chief Parker(Nick Nolte) to recruit an off-the-books squad of crimefighters to topple Cohen's empire without the benefit of a David Mamet screenplay.
    It's all good fun at first, even when it's obvious that each of these stock characters is introduced with a single attribute that shallowly defines them for the rest of the movie. O'Mara is a no-nonsense strategist with a punishing right hook and a supportive, pregnant wife (Mireille Enos, from AMC's "The Killing") waiting for him at home. Sgt. Jerry Wooters (Ryan Gosling) is a ladies' man who's reluctant to get involved until he meets Cohen's red-dressed moll Grace (Emma Stone), who wonders "where've you been all my miserable life?" –- a line Stone nearly chokes on as her chemistry with Gosling in "Crazy Stupid Love" curdles into lukewarm mush.
    Grizzled officer Max Kennard (Robert Patrick) is a legendary sharpshooter; his young Mexican partner Navidad Ramirez (Michael Peña) drives a mean chase car; and officer Conway Keller (Giovanni Ribisi) is an expert in post-war surveillance -- a techie version of Charles Martin Smith's ill-fated accountant from "The Untouchables." Each of them gets a moment to shine, usually accompanied by a crowd-pleasing quip or throwaway sight gag.
    Those scenes benefit from Fleischer's comedic sensibility, but whenever "Gangster Squad" gets down to the serious business of cutthroats and killers, its jarring shifts from light humor to heavy bloodshed reflect the movie's tonal identity crisis. We're ultimately left with a few action highlights (including a technically impressive car chase) and some dazzling recreations of vintage Hollywood landmarks, including Slapsy Maxie's nightclub (a frequent Cohen hangout) and the infamous Garden of Allah apartment complex.
    We're also treated to occasional (muzzle-) flashes of brilliance from Penn. His Cohen is like a corked-up volcano, always on the verge of eruption. At one point, Cohen grows so murderously vile that evil has contorted his visage. Penn, at 52, has acquired facial cracks and crevices that deepen his formidable presence, and his already heavy eyelids look like they're almost melting over Cohen's cold, unforgiving gaze.
    So while the cast has a field day, Fleischer seems content to equate flashiness with quality, employing such visual tricks as variable slow-motion when bullets and bodies are flying, and digital wizardry designed to give explosions and other pyrotechnics a dynamic, almost three-dimensional life of their own. And while the ultra-slow-mo image of a Christmas tree ornament shattering in a hail of bullets may look pretty cool for a few seconds, it's merely a brief distraction from the shortcomings of Will Beall's screenplay, adapted (loosely, we can assume) from the book of the same title by Paul Leiberman.
    Beall's script reaches its nadir, oddly enough, with Brolin's closing narration, which is so sentimentally sappy that it deservedly drew groans from a preview audience. By the time it fades to black, "Gangster Squad" has squandered most of its early promise. Here's a telling comparison: I recently happened upon a showing of "Mobsters," the Christian Slater vehicle that's been a cable-TV staple since its release in 1991. Packed with B- and C-list costars like Richard Greico and Costas Mandylor, it's still a marginally better film than "Gangster Squad," and that's faint praise indeed.
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