Movie
Review | Gangs of New York
Reviewed by: Brian
Orndorf
A year of delays, public battles, and running time questions have
lead to this: one of the finest motion pictures of the year. Martin
Scorsese’s “Gangs Of New York” is a vicious, hard fought film
that reveals that Scorsese is capable of making motion pictures bigger
than life, and yet preserving the awe of epic filmmaking that has been
lost for years.
The year is 1846, and a clan of Irish immigrants, lead by Priest
Vallon (Liam Neeson) have come to the deadliest part of the burgeoning
New York City, the Five Corners, to battle with a madman named William
Cutting, aka Bill The Butcher (Daniel Day-Lewis), and his horde of
Anglo-Saxon “natives.” When Priest Vallon is killed by William,
his son Amsterdam (Leonardo DiCaprio) is sent away to an orphanage,
and spends the next 16 years stewing in his plans for retribution.
Arriving back at the Five Corners, Amsterdam plots his way to William,
who now runs the city. Seeking help from all the individual gangs that
creep and swindle around the streets, plus assistance from a
pickpocket (Cameron Diaz) who has direct access to William, Amsterdam
tries to overthrow the Butcher. And all the while, the city is bulging
with the violence which will culminate in the draft riots of 1863.
Working from historical events, and a screenplay written by
frequent collaborator Jay Cocks (along with work by Kenneth Lonergan
and Steven Zaillian), “Gangs Of New York” is easily the grandest
film Scorsese has ever attempted. After years of inward looking,
soul-searching films (“Bringing Out The Dead,” “Kundun”)
“Gangs” opens up the director to a scale of filmmaking not touched
since the days of David Lean, with its wide open spaces, hundreds of
extras, and story that seethes with passion. The film maintains the
director’s expected reverence for New York City, and some brutal,
wholly necessary violence as well (the gang battle set pieces are the
film‘s outstanding achievement), but the magnitude of the film is
what is so remarkable. Scorsese works on the two boundaries presented,
an intimate revenge story, and the backdrop of the Draft Riots. He
never drops either subplot, seamlessly intertwining both stories to a
great result.
To fully appreciate Scorsese’s sprawling vision, one must look
back to his 1999 documentary “My Voyage To Italy,” a 4 hour
soliloquy on the Italian cinema that influenced this legendary
director. Inhaling large helpings of Rossellini, De Sica, and Visconti,
along with a desire to make a full-fledged production in Rome’s
fabled Cinecitta studios, Scorsese has made a film that’s as big as
life, yet comes pouring out from his heart. A magnum opus of
construction, design, and performance, “Gangs” is as close to an
honest-to-god epic as we’re going to see in a long time.
Starting with the stunning art direction by Robert Guerra and
Stefano Maria Ortloni, with production design work by Dante Ferretti
(“Casino,” “Bringing Out The Dead“), they form an strikingly
authentic city for the story to exist in. Few if any computer
landscapes are used, with real sets built 360 degrees around and
featuring obscenely elaborate workmanship. The result is a film
that’s simply staggering to behold. Every conceivable period detail
has been accounted for, from the slimy wax on the tips of moustaches,
the muddy, dangerous “Welcome To America” streets, the yellow,
decaying teeth, to the knife-pocked wood that holds up the rotting
buildings of the Five Corners. While other filmmakers scramble to the
keyboards to fill up their vistas, Scorsese had all his fiction built
for real, helping the actors to find the truth in their surroundings,
and giving the production a bona fide glow that isn’t betrayed for
even one frame of the film. A flawless production.
Also faultless is the work from actor Daniel Day-Lewis. The
normally reclusive actor (this is his first film since leaving the
business in 1997), comes out of hiding to deliver a thrilling
performance as the fiery demon, Bill The Butcher. The work is
unexpected, repulsive, and splendidly sadistic, and Day-Lewis handily
steals the film away from an impressive cast of acting heavyweights,
including sturdy lead work from DiCaprio, and supporting work from Jim
Broadbent, Brendan Gleeson, Liam Neeson, John C. Reilly, David
Hemmings, and Henry Thomas. This is the second pairing of Day-Lewis
and Scorsese (the equally as brilliant “The Age Of Innocence”
being the other), but I hope it isn’t their last. If having
Day-Lewis in retirement means performances like this one every decade,
than I wish him a happy time. This type of acting is worth the wait.
“Gangs Of New York” will have you ducking your head, at the
edge of your seat, and thrilled that Scorsese’s considerable risks
have paid off. This is magnificent filmmaking from a director that has
yet to let down.
Grade: 10/10
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