A DVD REVISIT: DONNIE BRASCO - SPECIAL EDITION (Columbia TriStar/Mandalay)

D

DJ Scotty

Banned
"A KILLER GANGSTER PICTURE!"
-Gene Shalit, Today Show
BASED ON A TRUE STORY

While I don’t really agree with my quoted cohort above, this film has always been mildly entertaining at the very least; nowhere in the same caliber as renowned established titles of this genre such as The Godfather, GoodFellas or perhaps even Casino if you want to stretch it, Mike Newell's Donnie Brasco has an odd feel to it, in addition to a rather strange pacing that somehow interjects with Johnny Depp and Al Pacino's "out-of-place" performances here. If you are a fan of either of these two, don’t go into this thinking these are the best performances of their careers -- because they’re far from it. Never before on the screen, save for perhaps Scent of a Woman has Pacino exhibited such a "powerlessness" through a character, especially being raised on tough-guy roles like Tony Montana in Scarface. At any rate, I grabbed this disc off my shelf the other night to revisit just because I was in the mood, and while Columbia TriStar/Mandalay's second attempt at releasing this title in a Special Edition format could somewhat justify a bit of applause, the results are not that spectacular at the end of the day, from a technical standpoint.

The film is based on a rather fascinating true case regarding FBI agent Joseph D. Pistone (and in a somewhat refreshing change as compared to Scorsese gangster masterpieces like GoodFellas and Casino where actual names were used in this) who was hired to infiltrate a mob family in New York in the what I believe was the 1970s; he gets into the graces of hitman "Lefty" Ruggiero (Pacino) by posing as a jewel "expert" who is supposedly "tied in" with the underground crime world. Pacino notices him sitting in a bar and approaches Depp to analyze a diamond given to him by someone who needed to pay a debt that was owed to Pacino. When Depp tells Pacino the diamond is a fake, and Depp ends up roughing up the strip club owner who gave the diamond to Pacino, Pacino sees a possible "made man" in Depp and takes him immediately under his wing. He brings him around his social club hangout where he is introduced to Pacino's immediate boss (Michael Madsen) known as "Sonny Black" who also has a boss to answer to -- a character named "Sonny Red."

As the film progresses, Pacino begins to "teach" Depp the ways of a mafia insider -- all the while having absolutely no idea that Depp is working undercover for the FBI. The film flashes back and forth attempting to show the struggles an undercover agent would have with balancing mafia family life and their own, as his marriage to Anne Heche is on the rocks and his relationship with his kids is becoming mauled. Pacino's mob family is in constant need now of "Donnie Brasco's" attendance with all their dealings, as he has proven to be a worthwhile member of the clan. Several sub plots begin to splinter here, as the FBI approaches Depp on one of his "off duty days" to inform him that an agent in Florida needs to front the opening of a night spot down there; Depp agrees to vouch for this agent, telling Pacino and Madsen and the rest of their crew that he has the perfect way of making more money than they ever did in New York -- the opening of a night spot called The King's Court in Florida. Madsen agrees to look into it, but Pacino is against it and advises Depp that if Depp does this, he himself is responsible for anything that goes wrong with Madsen and his men in Florida -- and that Pacino is ultimately responsible because he brought Depp into the family. This theme of "guilt" and "responsibility" in terms of Pacino to Depp runs rampant through the screenplay.

Madsen, Pacino and their men end up opening King's Court in Florida, and party hard with some topless chicks, even on a huge yacht Pacino asked Depp to acquire to impress some higher ranking mafia friends of theirs; Depp needs to go to the FBI for the money to do this. But bad blood begins to develop between Pacino and Depp and Pacino suspects Depp of "siding" with his boss Madsen; but in a way, Pacino turns out to be right as on the boat ride, Madsen approaches Depp and tells him he wants him to run the Florida activities for the family personally. This was an insult to Pacino's character, as it seems he has been "bumped" for this new guy, Donnie Brasco. Somehow, the Florida police get wind of this mafia-run nightclub and bust in the place on opening night, breaking everything inside and arresting Madsen, Depp, Pacino and the whole gang.

In the wake of the arrests, the guys figure out, in their community jail cell, that there must have been a rat who leaked the information about the club to the cops -- Madsen puts a contract out on whoever did it and tells Pacino he wants him to find the rat, cut his "prick off" and "stick it in his mouth" while leaving the body in the street. It ends up being Madsen's immediate boss, "Sonny Red," who was behind the whole police raid in order to shut down Madsen's operations in Florida. In revenge, Madsen plots a retaliation move whereby once returning to New York, his men are waiting for Sonny Red in his basement and when him and his guys walk in bragging about what they're going to do to Madsen and his men, the lights in the basement go on, and standing there are Madsen and his crew, holding shotguns where they proceed to wipe out every member of Sonny Red's guys. They then call in Depp, who was asked to stay in the car during this, to assist with cutting the bodies up with a saw -- something very hard for him to do as an undercover FBI agent. In the meantime, during this scene, Pacino shoots one of Madsen's men right in the head because they suspected him of being the rat they were looking for in Florida. But it wasn’t.

The whole concept of an FBI agent attempting to balance his life with these guys and absolutely relay to them that he is dedicated to their world is rendered quite accurately through Depp's character even though this wasn’t the role of his career. We get flashes of his going back to the FBI hideouts to deliver his taped conversations with Madsen and Pacino and to unravel their shady dealings, yet at the same time, he has developed a strange friendship with Pacino which shakes him because he knows he needs to eventually turn him in. We can feel the tension in Depp's character as he struggles with this. All the while, Depp continues to need to fit in; an interesting scene comes when Madsen and the crew enter a Japanese restaurant and they are asked to remove their shoes because of the Japanese custom. Depp is immediately alarmed because he has been keeping his secret FBI recording device in his pant leg, and this would immediately give him up. He refuses to take his shoes off, and even after threats from Madsen, convinces the guys to refuse taking their shoes off as well. When the restaurant manager flips his lid and will not give them a table, Madsen and the crew drag him into the bathroom and beat him within an inch of his life; its a bloody and shocking scene even in gangster film genre standards, as they leave this guy as bloody pulp on the bathroom floor. Depp simply cannot believe that Madsen and his crew allowed him to keep his shoes on with no suspicions and that they took his side in beating the **** out of this guy. He comes home to replay the tape and hears what happened as they beat this guy almost to death and feels bad about it.

Another subplot splinters involving Pacino's junkie son, who ends up in a hospital and when Depp comes to visit, Pacino wants no part of him because of the **** he pulled in Florida siding up to Madsen. Pacino, in an interesting moment, admits that he loves Donnie -- and just through his facial gestures, we can tell this has shaken Depp's character who knows he needs to bust this hitman but is having a hard time doing it because of the friendship that has developed. Inbetween, Depp's marriage to Heche is falling apart because of the job he is on, and they both attend counseling which just doesn’t help. Depp attempts to explain to Heche that if he comes out of the project now -- which the FBI has pleaded with Heche that Depp in fact must do -- the mob is going to kill Pacino because he brought him into the family to be trusted and to Depp, that’s just like putting the bullet in Pacino's head himself. He’s having a real hard time with this, and in a way, we understand this through that particular scene.

A turn of events wraps up the circle of violence and mayhem Depp had been involved in during this whole "Operation Don Brasco" and comes in the form of Pacino informing Depp that the son of Sonny Red -- the gangster they gunned down in his basement after he took out Madsen's Florida club operations -- has been on the loose and looking to take out Madsen and his men in revenge of his father. Pacino informs Depp that as long as this drugged-out loose cannon is out there, none of them are safe. And so Pacino gets the contract, along with Depp, to find and kill Sonny Red's son; he is found hiding out in a boat in a marina, and while Depp comes very close to being killed by Pacino himself because Pacino suspects him of setting up that boat party in Florida with assistance from the FBI, Depp manages to talk Pacino out of killing him as they focus on the murder of Sonny Red's son. Pacino wants Depp to do the shooting, however, and this makes things very tough for this undercover FBI agent who is now being asked to take a life. But just in the nick of time, the FBI arrives on the scene to bust the situation up, taking Depp into custody while Pacino's character is taken away in handcuffs while he pleads with Depp not to tell the FBI anything and not to cooperate. He still doesn’t know Depp's true identity.


CONTINUED IN PART II OF THE REVIEW...
 
nibhaz

nibhaz

Audioholic Chief
Mr. Aruti,
Do you plan on cutting and pasting all your reviews from the DVD Talk Forum to this forum? You are using up a lot of server space when a link such as this would suffice.

As for the review…through comes to mind…obsessively scarily through! ;)
 
Shinerman

Shinerman

Senior Audioholic
nibhaz said:
Mr. Aruti,
Do you plan on cutting and pasting all your reviews from the DVD Talk Forum to this forum? You are using up a lot of server space when a link such as this would suffice.

As for the review…through comes to mind…obsessively scarily through! ;)

And Audio Review as well.

Hopefully Lexmark, TLADINY, DJ SCOTtY, Scott Aruti will behave better here.

Shinerman
 
ducker

ducker

Full Audioholic
Is this a review or a "movie report?" Reads like a book report. The first paragraph starts out nicely outlining the strengths and weaknesses of the movie, and then . . . It's a nice refresher of a movie I did enjoy though! thanks.
I was thinking I was going to find some stuff about good audio in a particular scene or some such.
 
D

DJ Scotty

Banned
Shinerman said:
And Audio Review as well.

Hopefully Lexmark, TLADINY, DJ SCOTtY, Scott Aruti will behave better here.

Shinerman
Ahhhhhhhhhhhh..........another great hide-behind-the-computer-screen-simply-to-attack-someone member of the great Audio Review site.....should have known better.....Shinerman....hmmmm....what was YOUR moniker on Audio Review may I ask? Im trying to ascertain exactly who you were so I can figure out exactly what was so "wrong" with my behavior...

Folks, this "Shinerman" is a prime example of how people go from site to site with nothing better to do than track someone down and continuously harass them because they're jealous and cant stand when someone is simply better than they are at something....I can document this behavior if need be. It's pretty pathetic, but Im honored yet another person has been "tracking me down"...lol...

You wouldn't by any chance be our late great Sir Terrence The Terrible, would you "Shinerman"? Hmmmmm? That would be no surprise to me. At all.
:rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:
 
D

DJ Scotty

Banned
ducker said:
Is this a review or a "movie report?" Reads like a book report. The first paragraph starts out nicely outlining the strengths and weaknesses of the movie, and then . . . It's a nice refresher of a movie I did enjoy though! thanks.
I was thinking I was going to find some stuff about good audio in a particular scene or some such.
I dont understand where I went wrong as this was a rather solid review, Ducker, but I do appreciate you taking the time to read it and comment on it; can you elaborate a little more as to what you meant by "expecting to find some good stuff about audio in a particular scene"? There was no exciting audio to really speak of, unfortunately. The 5.0 mix was pretty hollow.

Do you have the DVD? Did you find the same?
 
Shinerman

Shinerman

Senior Audioholic
DJ Scotty said:
Ahhhhhhhhhhhh..........another great hide-behind-the-computer-screen-simply-to-attack-someone member of the great Audio Review site.....should have known better.....Shinerman....hmmmm....what was YOUR moniker on Audio Review may I ask? Im trying to ascertain exactly who you were so I can figure out exactly what was so "wrong" with my behavior...

Folks, this "Shinerman" is a prime example of how people go from site to site with nothing better to do than track someone down and continuously harass them because they're jealous and cant stand when someone is simply better than they are at something....I can document this behavior if need be. It's pretty pathetic, but Im honored yet another person has been "tracking me down"...lol...

You wouldn't by any chance be our late great Sir Terrence The Terrible, would you "Shinerman"? Hmmmmm? That would be no surprise to me. At all.
:rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:
You know it's me, JSE!

Welcome to this site.
 
D

DJ Scotty

Banned
Shinerman said:
You know it's me, JSE!

Welcome to this site.
Well, well......now THAT explained it all....

No further explanation needed....

It was either you or the other troll who tracks people down, the Terrible one from the light in the loafers Bay Area; thanks for the welcome!
:p
 
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