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The Rat Pack Details

1998 Certificate 15
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 296 members

They had the world on a string; Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford, and Joey Bishop--collectively known as 'The Rat Pack'. These cool cats set the style and pace for 1950s America as the nation hurtled towards the swinging 60s. But as they learn, all good things must eventually come to an end... Read more

Starring Ray Liotta, Joe Mantegna, Don Cheadle, Angus Macfadyen
Director Rob Cohen
Genres Drama

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The Rat Pack

They had the world on a string; Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford, and Joey Bishop--collectively known as 'The Rat Pack'. These cool cats set the style and pace for 1950s America as the nation hurtled towards the swinging 60s. But as they learn, all good things must eventually come to an end...

Starring Ray Liotta, Joe Mantegna, Don Cheadle, Angus Macfadyen, William Petersen
Director Rob Cohen
Studio CINEMA CLUB
Run time DVD: 1 hr 54 mins
Certificate Certificate 15
Genres Drama
Language DVD: English
Released DVD: 14 Oct 2002
Production year: 1998
Format DVD
  • Critics' reviews of The Rat Pack

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  • 3 stars out of 5

    Ray Liotta as Frank Sinatra, Joe Mantegna as Dean Martin, Don Cheadle as Sammy Davis Jr and Angus MacFadyen as Peter Lawford. You don't really believe it's them until they go on stage at one of JFK's fundraisers and sing High Hopes, JFK gives a speech, Marilyn coos and the movie snaps into gear. Less flashy but far more interesting than Scorsese's Casino or GoodFellas, the film explores Sinatra's twin links to the Mob and to Jack and Robert Kennedy, compromised when JFK enters the White House and when RFK declares war on organised crime. The pulse of the era is beautifully evoked as Sinatra learns the difference between entertaining the nation and running the nation state. Suddenly, the spectre of assassination looms over everyone's head, but when a mobster is urged to bump off Sinatra he thinks for a minute and says, “Naah, I wanna to hear him sing Chicago again.”

    • Radio Times
  • Most helpful member's review of The Rat Pack

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  • 10 out of 10 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 3 stars

    Decent biopic

    American cable channel HBO makes a fair attempt to tell the story of Frank Sinatra and pals. Directed by Rob Cohen(before he started inflicting Vin Diesel films upon the world), 'The Rat Pack' is a stylish film that aims to contrast the gang's public high life with their private traumas.

    Of course, in a film such as this casting is key and here 'The Rat Pack' mostly passes the test. Ray Liotta takes the lead role of Sinatra despite not looking or sounding a great deal like him, but he gives a strong enough performance to carry the picture. The real success stories lie in the supporting cast. Joe Mantegna nails Dean Martin's swagger and wry one liners and portrays him as a character casting a jaded eye over the soulless showbiz scene. He may play up to the womanising, partying image but he sleeps alone.

    However the real star here is Don Cheadle who superbly plays Sammy Davis Jr. Davis is shown to be a slightly insecure man who knows Sinatra and Martin are often condescending to him but he needs their friendship. The most poignant scenes in the film occur when Sinatra vows to stand by Davis over his controversial marriage to May Britt in the face of hostile bigotry.The script gives short shrift to the rest of the cast. Peter Lawford is well played by Angus MacFayden while Joey Bishop is marginalised into irrelevance. But William Petersen has fun as a sleazy JFK.

    'The Rat Pack' is not without it's flaws. It often tries to cram major events into floating newspaper headline montages while the likes of Ava Gardner, Marilyn Monroe and Mickey Cohen vanish as soon as they appear. The film glosses over Sinatra's mob connections and did we really need Davis' dream sequence where he faces off against the racists? It really jars with the realistic tone elsewhere and takes the viewer out of the picture.

    While 'The Rat Pack' doesn't have all the details(those interested might like to check out Shaun Levy's excellent book of the same name), it's solid cast make it a more than entertaining chronicle of an era when a select group of entertainers could have, and do, anything they wanted.

      • Philip Concannon from London
  • Most recent members' review of The Rat Pack

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  • 10 out of 10 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 3 stars

    Decent biopic

    American cable channel HBO makes a fair attempt to tell the story of Frank Sinatra and pals. Directed by Rob Cohen(before he started inflicting Vin Diesel films upon the world), 'The Rat Pack' is a stylish film that aims to contrast the gang's public high life with their private traumas.

    Of course, in a film such as this casting is key and here 'The Rat Pack' mostly passes the test. Ray Liotta takes the lead role of Sinatra despite not looking or sounding a great deal like him, but he gives a strong enough performance to carry the picture. The real success stories lie in the supporting cast. Joe Mantegna nails Dean Martin's swagger and wry one liners and portrays him as a character casting a jaded eye over the soulless showbiz scene. He may play up to the womanising, partying image but he sleeps alone.

    However the real star here is Don Cheadle who superbly plays Sammy Davis Jr. Davis is shown to be a slightly insecure man who knows Sinatra and Martin are often condescending to him but he needs their friendship. The most poignant scenes in the film occur when Sinatra vows to stand by Davis over his controversial marriage to May Britt in the face of hostile bigotry.The script gives short shrift to the rest of the cast. Peter Lawford is well played by Angus MacFayden while Joey Bishop is marginalised into irrelevance. But William Petersen has fun as a sleazy JFK.

    'The Rat Pack' is not without it's flaws. It often tries to cram major events into floating newspaper headline montages while the likes of Ava Gardner, Marilyn Monroe and Mickey Cohen vanish as soon as they appear. The film glosses over Sinatra's mob connections and did we really need Davis' dream sequence where he faces off against the racists? It really jars with the realistic tone elsewhere and takes the viewer out of the picture.

    While 'The Rat Pack' doesn't have all the details(those interested might like to check out Shaun Levy's excellent book of the same name), it's solid cast make it a more than entertaining chronicle of an era when a select group of entertainers could have, and do, anything they wanted.

      • Philip Concannon from London
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Rating breakdown

296 Member ratings
  • 100
23
  • 90
17
  • 80
35
  • 70
51
  • 60
62
  • 50
36
  • 40
23
  • 30
19
  • 20
19
  • 10
11

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    • They had the world on a string; Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford, and Joey Bishop--collectively known as 'The Rat Pack'. These cool cats set the style and pace for 1950s ...