OK post robbery time, the lazy bugger that writes this stuff (i.e. me) has to decided to pinch another post from that other blog (loaded with tennis posts) and this one is Carlito's Way, Brian De Palma's classic thriller about a former gangster who tries to turn good. But I've decided to add to the entry to prove I'm not being too lazy. So without further ado here's the plot....
Right so the film begins with Carlito Brigante (Pacino) who has just been
acquitted after serving five years of a 30 year sentence, and a former
big drug dealer, who returns to the streets of New York and his Peurto
Rican neigbourhood. However after his time in the joint, Carlito
finally has changed and no longer wants to return to his life of crime
and wants to start again with a clean slate. But going straight isn't
all that easy for Carlito as he gets drawn into the life again, after
narrowly surviving a botched drug deal which he is brought along on by
his cousin, who is then killed, leaving Carlito to shoot his way out of
the bar. Carlito then uses the money from the drug deal to buy into
taking share of a nightclub, which his lawyer friend David Kleinfeld
(Penn) also puts money into. But Carlito insists he is only buying in
so he can get enough money together to get out and take over one of the
friend's in the joint's car businesses, to ensure he will go straight.
Along the way Carlito also re-unites with his former girlfriend Gail
(Penelope Ann Miller). But Carlito also faces a few new problems, the
first one being and up and coming gangster Benny Blanco "from the Bronx"
(John Leguizmo) who repeatedly tries to get Carlito to become business
partners with him, which ultimately leads to a fight in the club, where
Carlito tells Benny if he returns to the club he will be killed. Benny
then swears if he ever sees Carlito again he will kill him, which leads
Carlito to knock him down a flight of stairs, but rather than kill him
he choose to let him go.
And Carlito's biggest problem
of all is his buddy David Kleinfeld, who in his absence has become
quite a corrupt fella, who is into jury tampering, bribing, and money
laundering. Kleinfeld also stupidly gets involved in ripping off a mob
boss Tony "T" Taglialucci (Frank Minucci) by stealing a million dollars
from him. Tony insists that Kleinfeld help him bust out of prison, and
given very little choice in the matter, as Tony will have him killed if
he doesn't. At this point Kleinfeld becomes a nervous wreck, using
cocaine regularly, and he asks Carlito to help him with Tony T's prison
break, who initially is reluctant but agrees to help David out. On the
night of the breakout Kleinfeld is accompanied by Tony T's son, Frank
(Adrian Pasdar) as well as Carlito, but on locating Tony in the rough
waters, Kleinfeld beats Tony T to death with a golf club and cuts
Frank's throat. With Carlito's help, Kleinfeld dumps the two mobsters
bodies into the river, Carlito now incensed at Kleinfeld's actions, says
they are through and walks away. Despite being confident about shaking
off the mafia, Kleinfield the next day is attacked by two mobsters who
stab him in the chest, however he survives. Shortly after this happens
Carlito is brought in for questioning by the DA Norwalk (James Rebhorn)
who plays him a tape of Kleinfeld tipping off Carlito as supposedly
dealing again, Norwalk offers Carlito a chance to testify against
Kleinfeld, but he denies knowledge of the events surrounding Tony T's
murder, even though the DA insists he knows that he was on the boat with
Kleinfeld at the time. Carlito soon after confronts Kleinfeld himself
who by now is recovering in his hospital from his attack, and Carlito
finally gets confirmation of his Jewish friend's duplicity, leaving him
with an empty gun for when the mob guys come after him. And duly
enough, Tony T's surviving son Vinnie (Joseph Siravo) dressed as a cop
comes in and kills Kleinfeld with a silenced gun. At this point the
mafia guys track Carlito to his nightclub and there he faces a tense
game of cat and mouse as he tries to escape his enemies and leave his life of crime behind him once and for all.
Carlito's Way is not only a great crime thriller in its own right, its also ranks as one of Brian De Palma's best films and it features so
many great suspenseful scenes, two of which in particular are the drug
deal that goes awry near the start of the film with Carlito forced into shooting his way out. And the other being the big chase scene
through Grand Central station at the end. De Palma as usual also
employs many of his camera techniques, the opening scene is definitely
worthy of note, the way it starts with the camera turning upside down as
we see Carlito being carted away on a stretcher into an ambulence.
Performance
wise, the film also features an excellent cast, Pacino particularly is
great as Carlito, and plays him as a man with a dark past who really has
changed and become a better person, who just wants to try wipe the
slate clean and start again. Carlito also gets some of the film's best
dialogue, my favourite of course being the title of this entry, "Here
comes the pain!!" during his tense shoot-out in the botched drug deal at
the start of the film. Another line Pacino has that sticks in the mind is when he confronts Benny Blanco in the club "you think you like me??? You ain't like me, motherfucker, you're a punk! I've been with connected people, who you been with??? Chain snatching, jive ass maricon motherfuckers! Get out of here, snatch a purse, take a fuckin walk!". Pacino also has some great dramatic moments in the film and one of the best is when he goes to Klenfield after he has seen a friend of his, Lalin (Viggo Mortenson, great in this part) who was wired and tried to get him on tape saying he was dealing again. Carlito angrily says to Kleinfeld "fuckin, Lalin, man! There's nobody, there's nobody left!".
Sean Penn is also great as the slimy and
devious David Kleinfeld, and he wears that 70s permed hairdo quite
convincingly! His funniest moment in the film comes when he taunts a mafia associate who in one scene dances with Carlito's girlfriend, Gail, and he says "hey you! Wop! You, spaghetti dick!". But more importantly Penn brilliantly shows Kleinfeld come apart at the seams as the film progresses, events spiral out of control and he becomes a coke addled mess as events inexorably lead towards his sticky end. His scene where he Carlito faces him in hospital for the last time is also really good where Carlito finally sees him for what he is, and Kleinfeld says "fuck you and your self-righteous code of the goddamn street!".
John Leguizmo is also very good as the ambitious young
gangster Benny Blacno who later proves to be Carlito's nemesis, and Benny is naturally very arrogant, and all too quick to point out who he is all the time, but he praises Carlito intially when they meet "this man is the JP Morgan of the smack business!". Carlito of course looks down on Benny throughout the film, and he says to Stephie (a girl that hangs around the club) "he's got a big future, if he can last past next week!". Luis
Guzman as Pachanga, Carlito's bodyguard is priceless too, as he delivers
his dialogue so well, and I love it when he says "Come on, Carlito,
lets dump him off the pier, like old times. Be fun pappi be fun!".
Perhaps though the only real weak link in the cast is Penelope Ann
Miller, as Carlito's girlfriend Gail, and its not so much a slight
against her as an actress as she does a fine job with her role, its her
scenes aren't that interesting. But Penelope does have one really good
scene with Al, where she argues with him about his boat trip with
Kleinfeld and she pleads with him not to go, and lets also face it, she
has a great body! ;-)
And while the film has many
strengths, it has few weaknesses, although if I have to pick one or two
or just the main one, then it would be Carlito's almost naive trust in
those around him, particularly with Kleinfed, who despite getting him
released from prison, betrays him to the DA and nearly gets him killed
by the mafia. Yet throughout we can see how blatantly devious he is,
and Carlito must be putting on some serious blinders to it, either or
that or just maybe he's not too bright when it comes to his own
friends. As the film progresses we see that Carlito's attitude towards
Kleinfeld does change from overawed respect to cynicism, and by the time
he gets to the boat ride, he has almost gone off him entirely, which at
that point makes you wonder why he even did it. Carlito also has the
same blind loyalty to his bodyguard Pachanga, who at the end of the film
(SPOILER!!) is revealed to have betrayed him as well to Benny Blanco, in
promise for getting rich off the young gangster, who instead just kills
Pachanga and runs off. Just deserts there I guess. But throughout it
you do see Carlito's strong moral character and of course he makes a few
decisions that put him in serious danger and one that costs him his
life, it does show that he doesn't want to go back to that old life. So
even if Carlito's choices cost him so dear, its almost as if he would
rather keep his soul rather than go down the bad road once again. (pretty deep!). Also quickly it has to be said that Joseph Siravo as Vinnie Taglialucci (the son of the Tony T, the mob boss that Klenfield bumps off) gives a pretty duff performance, particularly in the scene where he spots Carlito in the busy grand central station "Hey there is!!".
But that aside its all good, and before I finish I have to say something about the film's excellent score by Patrick Doyle,
who provides a wonderfully dramatic soundtrack, which has several great
passages, mainly the chase scenes through grand central station are very
noteworthy. And in addition to that music DJ Jellybean Benitez provides an excellent supplementary soundtrack with some music from the 70s, with a mixture of salsa, latino, as well as disco tracks of that time, which is heard mostly in the club scenes.
Soooooo that's it for Carlito's Way, which
definitely ranks as one of my favourite crime thriller movies, and given the surprisingly poor reception it received on its release, it is fitting that its gained the reputation that it now deserves.
And that's that one out the way.
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