Genre:
Crime/Thriller
Director: Martin Scorsese
Cast: Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon, Jack
Nicholson, Mark Wahlberg, Martin Sheen, Ray Winstone, Vera
Farmiga, Anthony Anderson, Alec Baldwin
RunTime: 2 hrs 29 mins
Released By: Warner Bros
Rating: M18 (Coarse Language and Violence)
Opening
Day: 12 October 2006
Soundtrack: READ
OUR REVIEW ON THE ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK
Synopsis
:
The
Departed is set in South Boston, where the state police force
is waging war on organized crime. Young undercover cop Billy
Costigan (Leonardo DiCaprio) is assigned to infiltrate the
mob syndicate run by gangland chief Costello (Jack Nicholson).
While Billy is quickly gaining Costello’s confidence,
Colin Sullivan (Matt Damon), a hardened young criminal who
has infiltrated the police department as an informer for the
syndicate, is rising to a position of power in the Special
Investigation Unit. Each man becomes deeply consumed by his
double life, gathering information about the plans and counter-plans
of the operations he has penetrated. But when it becomes clear
to both the gangsters and the police that there’s a
mole in their midst, Billy and Colin are suddenly in danger
of being caught and exposed to the enemy – and each
must race to uncover the identity of the other man in time
to save himself.
Movie
Review:
As
darkly comedic and resonant as “Goodfellas” (if
they had mobiles and wireless Internet) and as virile and
gritty as “Mean Streets”, Scorcese scores a winner
by all regards in “The Departed”. And yet the
closest description for a story of this magnitude that spans
across the generations and multiple complex characters would
be “L.A. Confidential”. Rarely does a film work
on every level that it aspires to and there’s really
not much to say that contradicts it. It’s a potboiler
crime fiction of epic proportions with every strand of intersecting
plot brimming with rising conflict.
The coarse
dialogue, contextual environments and masculine anti-heroes
are straight out of Scorcese’s playbook, transposed
from mobs to cops. The frissons of being mucked in such a
ravenous war zone of conflicting ideals is slowly transformed
into a deeper sense of apprehension when it becomes an operatic
thriller that closes in on the deception and betrayal between
the men caught on the frontlines.
Let me
just begin by assuaging fears of a slavish copy of the original
as Scorcese, who is arguable the master of the modern gangster
genre (including the inspiration for Hong Kong’s wave
of gangster films) makes this revision very much his own and
all but seals his accolades come award season. The premise
and plot structure remain true, but key sequences have been
given a new treatment and there are different assertions and
idiosyncrasies in the characters which are created by their
respective actors.
It’s
a welcome difference in the locale from Hong Kong to Boston.
It allows for more elaborate setpieces with clever use of
racial prejudices and homophobia in the language that adds
another dimension to the politics involved. And of course
a much more vibrant Boston landscape in the film’s brooding
atmosphere that plays a bigger part in the film’s scope
with its flagrant bending of time and space. And as usual,
one actor stands out playing his role the way audiences have
always recognised him. He brings a crucial, unrestrained element
to his larger-than-life character that one might suspect is
unseen in the script.
Nicholson’s
Costello is an expanded takeoff from Eric Tsang’s supremely
underdeveloped but scene-stealing role as the mob boss Sam
in “Infernal Affairs”, just one of Scorcese’s
prerogatives that was undertaken with the glut of talented
performers he was presented with. Nicholson forces himself
into the foreground with yet another of his quintessential
performances that borders somewhere between paranoia, rage
and aloofness. But Scorcese burdens the film’s strongest
scenes by placing Nicholson in the centre stage, letting him
pull the emotional strings with nervy self-reliance by sheer
presence alone. Of course, this can be a masterstroke at times,
but an overdose of Jack can betray a scene’s natural
gravitas.
And it’s
made clear very early on that this is not a man to be trifled
with, no matter how captivating Frank Costello is. We must
not like him, even if we must resist the temptation to. In
an opening monologue that draws us in closer than a thousand
scenes ever could, Costello reveals himself as a growling
psychopath that’s only certain of one thing –
himself. Effort is taken to magnify the man. Almost as if
recounting the exploits of Kaiser Soze with its fair of tight
crosscutting, immersive edits that squeeze out backstory and
narration of a merciless killer.
The cat-and-mouse
dynamics between Damon and DiCaprio’s characters are
the anchor of the latter half of the film. It reaches breaking
point when the walls close down and they have to handle the
responsibility of decisions alone and the unrelenting paranoia
under deadly scrutiny. A common respect is grounded between
the 2 moles, and Scorcese wisely cuts between the snippets
of their lives during the good times and the bad times to
show the impact of sacrifice within those men. There’s
also not so much of the ellipsis that the original had in
its narrative, which really fills in big gaps and rounds off
each of the players involved. The high doses of tension and
great pacing carries the momentum of each revelation further
through the story, as the stakes get higher and higher. The
urgency and fearlessness of the camera swerving in and out
of confrontations and intimate close-ups of low-key moments
create moments of significance out of nothing.
Scorcese
works indelibly well with an observant DiCaprio, who once
again brings pathos to a character that had stylistic sheen
overpower its emotional whiplashes in the original. As much
in Nicholson’s shadow as Damon is within his, there’s
a hierarchy of powerful performers present that in any other
film would have been overkill. But in new scribe William Monahan’s
script, each character is fleshed out and most importantly,
each of them has a clear voice. There are hints about the
battles of moral complexities being fought by the characters.
Their actions carry weight further into the film. There’s
resistance to the actions that need to be done and guilt over
those that have been done. They are established clear roles
early on and it’s compelling to see how these roles
are switched around until the final crescendo of madness ceases.
Movie
Rating:
(Unapologetically indulgent, it’s
a masterful effort by Scorcese after 11 years of absence in
his strongest genre)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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