Two boyhood friends grow up to become the kingpins of a prohibition-era criminal empire until their own greed and ambition cause their downfall. Based on Larry Grey's novel, "The Hoods." Read more
| Starring | Robert De Niro, James Woods, Elizabeth McGovern, Joe Pesci |
|---|---|
| Director | Sergio Leone |
| Genres | Drama |
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Two boyhood friends grow up to become the kingpins of a prohibition-era criminal empire until their own greed and ambition cause their downfall. Based on Larry Grey's novel, "The Hoods."
| Starring | Robert De Niro, James Woods, Elizabeth McGovern, Joe Pesci, Burt Young, Tuesday Weld, Treat Williams |
|---|---|
| Director | Sergio Leone |
| Studio | WARNER HOME VIDEO |
| Run time | DVD: 3 hrs 40 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | English |
| Dubbed | Italian |
| Hearing-impaired | English, Italian |
| Subtitles | English, Italian |
| Released | DVD: 23 Jun 2003 Production year: 1984 |
| Format | DVD |
Sergio Leone was the man who reinvented the western with the Dollars films starring Clint Eastwood and also the masterly Once upon a Time in the West. This, his final film, is an extraordinary crime drama that runs for nearly four hours in its full-length version and chronicles the lives of two New York gangsters, Noodles and Max, played by Robert De Niro and James Woods. Clearly influenced by the Godfather — wags called Noodles and Max the kosher nostra — it is made on a massive scale. Four decades roll past in flashback, underpinned by a great Ennio Morricone score. The plotting is often arbitrary, but, unlike The Godfather, Leone and his fine actors never try to win our sympathy: these are nasty people and there are two rape scenes, involving Tuesday Weld and Elizabeth McGovern, that may be among the most shocking ever filmed. But just gasp at the scale, at the immaculate period reconstruction and at that incredible opening with its endlessly ringing phone. This is essentially a re-examination of Leone's western preoccupations. Just as he reclaimed the west for violent, uncomplicated men, here he treats crime and corruption as a quintessential part of modern American life. According to Leone, we shouldn't be shocked that a bootlegger can end up mixing with the rich and powerful. That's just how the system works. It's a scathing indictment of America's recent past and perhaps that's why, like Michael Cimino's Heaven's Gate, it was a resounding flop on its US release and was heavily cut by its panicked distributors. It fared better in Europe, where it was hailed as a masterpiece of 1980s cinema.
Vast, sprawling, violent crime saga that is both the epitome and summation of gangster movies, a powerful, almost operatic drama of waste and despair.
This film is a masterpiece. The first time I saw it at nearly four hours long I rewound it and watched it all over again. There aren't many long films (even good ones) that make you want to do that. A back to back sitting of Schindler's List anyone? The soundtrack is monumental, the plot is epic and the acting incredible and I defy any red blooded male not to fall in love with Elizabeth McGovern as much as Noodles (Robert de Niro). Watch it, then watch it again then buy it!
Sergio Leone's epic gangster film is aiming for the lofty heights of the Godfather trilogy all in one film. Focusing on a group of Jewish gangsters from New York's Lower East Side, this multigenerational story spans from prohibition to the late 1960's.
At close to four hours long the story moves along at a steady pace. It chronicles the boys in the neighbourhood on their upward trajectory toward criminal success, their successful years during prohibition and De Niro and Woods coming face to face as old men after over 30 years apart in the late 60's.
The film's quality lays in its vast sets, actual replicas built of New York. The grandiose nature of the film's backdrop help to focus the audience in on the individual characters: in particular the battle for ultimate control between hotheaded Max, James Woods, and the unassuming, Noodles, De Niro.
Like "The Godfather" it shows how the criminal life although brings material rewards leads to a hardening of the soul and an inherent loneliness. Once you have accepted that life, no matter how much you try to change, you can not change fundamentally who you are.
An excellent mood score by Ennio Morricone drives the narrative along.
A quality film which can not quite match "The Godfather", the film it is trying to ape.
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