"an arresting, food-for-thought gangster iteration."
This is de facto a very long Good Friday for London mobster boss Harold Shand (Hoskins) (and he might not be alive and kicking on Easter Monday),he must impress and convince the newly landed American mafia kingpin Charlie (Constantine) to a significant partnership of redeveloping his home turf, but is ambushed by a concatenation of foul plays from an unknown party, a car bomb aiming at his mother but kills the chauffeur, a luckily defused bomb found in his casino, his pub is blown up right in front of his face, but worst of the all, Collin (Freeman), one of his right-hand men and a chum who once saved his life, is cold-bloodedly murdered in a natatorium (whose bent predisposition subjects himself to a delectable but pestilant male bait, Brosnan in his screen debut).
When the shit hits the fan, Harold is bent on getting the bottom of it, even it requires to put his clueless cronies through the mangle (or more literally, hung topsy-turvy inside his abattoir) to extract any possible lead, meanwhile, he endeavors to keep a lid on the state of affairs from Charlie and relies on his girlfriend Victoria (Mirren) to mollify Charlie's suspicion of his own absence, which turns out to be futile, he is left 24 hours to sort things out, if not there will be no deal with the Yankees.
For sure, someone close to him must have an inkling of what is going on (the go-to design of a mole within), and audience is granted with a preface in Belfast where Collin clandestinely appropriates some cash from his consignment, and taking its milieu into account, it is quite a cinch that IRA is implicated in some point, and screenwriterBarrie Keeffe’s puzzle-solving script takes routinely dramatic turns to work up Harold’s retaliation, lends him great opportunities of vaunting and venting to establish him as the real deal, a forward-looking, ruthless yet compassionate padrone imbued with Corleone-esque complexity, and a dumpy Bob Hoskins magnificently holds sway in rendering Harold a flesh-and-blood persona that defies simple compartmentalization, he is a live-wire simmering with aspirant ambition and sharp-witted wiles, a patriotic boaster but inanely reckons that the best way to solve all his problems is by elimination, that is his feet of clay, too cocksure in his tried-and-tested methodology which leads him to step into the taxi without even noticing who is inside.
Helen Mirren also makes for a spectacular moll, not the usual ditzy bombshell sort, but Harold’s equal with acumen and a wonderful admixture of dignity and vulnerability. A square-jawedEddie Constantine exudes a flinty but suave sheen, which is always pleasing to watch, but it is up to the newcomer Derek Thompson, who plays Harold’s ill-fated consigliere Jeff, to supply emotional ammunition in the story by facing off Harold’s anger outburst, his childlike ambiguity between nonchalance and sophistication (and a touch of raffishness in the elevator scene with Mirren) leaves a delicate impression and outstrips many a more ostentatious player around him.
DirectorJohn Mackenzie proves himself an able journeyman behind the camera and his invention of Hoskins’ final shock-to-resignation long-take is a decisive coup-de-maître, sublimates a corny ending to something with a semblance of extraordinariness. But the movie’s blaring synth Muzak has taken its time to become a major pet peeve at that point, a sign-of-the-times short-changes this otherwise arresting, food-for-thought gangster iteration.
referential films: Francis Ford Coppola’s THE GODFATHER (1972, 8.4/10), THE GODFATHER: PART II (1974, 9.1/10).
讲了爱尔兰共和军和码头区的故事,展示了 20 世纪 70 年代后期、80 年代初期的伦敦,就是在二战被炸毁了的码头区取景的,你会看到那些被炸毁了的仓库,以及一个黑帮成员希望重建这个地方。这部电影会像你展示伦敦那个时候有多糟糕,以及和现在的强烈对比。伦敦现在的一切都是在那个被炸的稀巴烂的基础上建起来的。
因为阵容多给一星- 青葱的Kevin McNally跟Pierce Brosnan、年轻貌美的Helen Mirren、俊俏的Paul Freeman,当然还有主角Bob Hoskins,故事的悬念跟铺垫做得很好引人入胜结尾的处理更加精彩!! 最后几分钟Bob的脸部大特写太赞-看似五短粗糙的Bob其实表演还是相对细腻的...
让英格兰分外头痛的爱尔兰问题在本片获得了直观体现,以为在自家地盘呼风唤雨掌控大局的人,结果呢,因为手下吞了人家6千英镑,炸弹盛宴便接踵而来,任凭眼线多,揪出内鬼,轰了几个杀手,逃得过大批不要命的热血徒么?
把黑帮片拍成基片的道路上,banana fish差这部一百条街。虽然音乐堆得极满极聒噪,熬过钙兮兮碎渣渣的开头,鲍勃·霍斯金斯的出场像头狮子镇住了全片。片子不长,但一会儿明示国际关系,一会儿拉起性情张力,层次极丰富。霍斯金斯的爆发力太棒了,还不经意cos了伊凡雷帝。
这绝对不是一部黑帮片那么简单 它是英国社会矛盾的缩影 简洁流畅 几个大明星的表演也是可圈可点
黑帮片总是不会让人昏昏欲睡,鲍勃·霍斯金斯的表演确实不错,就连最后几个的镜头表情的变化都让人叫绝。布鲁斯南搞了半天就是最后那个拿枪的爱尔兰人?
无疑是最好的黑帮片之一。鲍勃霍普金斯强大逼真且极富感染力的表演更是令人叹为观止。
美国教父什么没见过,也不想想黨字怎么写,美好而漫长的星期五,伦敦教父抱着马头睡
伦敦黑帮片,和纽约黑帮片相映成趣,没有一丁点伤感,Hoskins像一头发育良好的斗犬,很难想象有比他更无法令观众同情的第一主角了。
看不出CC收录这一部的原因...————彻底看完之后我改变了一点想法,这电影的精华在最后五分钟,前面都只是漫长的铺垫寓言最后黑老大对美国人的一番大英帝国骄傲发言加上上车后wheres Victoria,意味深长但除此之外没什么值得看的————查理是阿尔法城的男主,刚好CCspine是排在一起的
很漫长但并不怎么美好.一个时代的终结是任谁都阻止不了的事.身边的人一个个的背叛自己,不是杀一个两个就能解决掉的事情.最后一个长镜头里,主人公的纠结大约是虎落平阳的无力了吧.片子年代久远,看起来有些教父的影子.大约那个年代之于他们是一种共同的背景下共同人生目标,十年河东十年河西,风水轮流转,大家轮流做老大.
「It's Good Friday. Have a Bloody Mary.」
对我而言这样一部发生在伦敦的黑帮电影是一场新鲜特别的体验,因为与自己习惯和主流所熟悉的黑帮题材电影(如《教父》系列)的人物塑造方式和每一场戏内外部的处理都不太一样。Harold更像是阿尔帕西诺版本的“教父”式人物,但更多地是体现在他对伦敦各个社区的管理方式,而他的形象更加独立,人物性格更加的外放和情绪化。开头的并行谋杀平行剪辑,太容易让人联想起《教父I》的结尾。而电影整体难以说清的感觉被Janet Maslin概括得恰当,她认为由于导演的电视导演经验背景,让电影的观感趋于一种类似剧集般随着每一场的进行而依次整块平稳上升。但电影仍然过分地趋于一种情节剧的模式,聚焦放大每个主要人物的情绪,并加入了有关伦敦本地、爱尔兰问题和欧盟的政治议题讨论,使得电影更像是一种从英国本土风格模式当中孵化出的新故事和新人物。
英国黑帮片,男主角鲍勃·霍斯金斯演的不错,有黑老大气势和凶残。皮尔斯·布鲁斯南那时很年轻,出演一个小配角。
"It's my manor." "Not anymore Harold, they're taking it away from you."
Brosnan太帅了~~~~
You Bastard!当真是心比天高,命比纸薄。鲍勃·霍普金斯一张脸全是戏,布鲁斯南年轻时帅爆了。#DVD#
Bob Hoskins演出了一位自负认不清状况的老大,最后将自己陷入绝路。结尾的车内特写,表情的变化,也预示着气氛从掌控转向愤怒不甘再转向平静妥协坠入绝望。爱尔兰激进分子与英国黑帮老大之间的身份政治双关可谓厉害。
Mirren有那么一点点像祝无双= =
我好像从没看过这么老的英国电影
最后,当老大对放他鸽子的美国人冠冕堂皇地说:欧洲才是最大的市场!我顿觉:也蛮主旋律的阿!但最后一个回旋,老大那个从惊恐——平静——无奈——笑——悲伤的表情我绝对震撼。