Road to Perdition, adapted from the graphic
novel by David Self, directed by Sam Mendes
9 out of 10
Notes and
thoughts on other books are available at:
- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLEVa4_CsRStSBBDo4uJWT8BSWtTTn0N1E
and http://realini.blogspot.ro/
Road to
Perdition is an exceptional film.
-
Why is it that it did not get more
recognition?
-
I do not know
Tom Hanks
has the leading role of Michael Sullivan and it is a tough challenge, a man
with many sides, but he is very good in that position.
Paul Newman
has a negative role, that of John Rooney, an Irish American mobster that
controls an underworld empire.
Indeed,
Paul Newman, excellent at his late stage in his outstanding, brilliant career-
started with Somebody up There Likes Me, a role which he could take because
Montgomery Clift wouldn’t-was nominated for
-
The Academy Award and the Golden
Globe for his acting
Otherwise, I
do not see why this motion picture did not go further than it did, even with a
good Metascore of 72.
As for
possible flaws, maybe Jude Law is somewhat over the top as the paid, lunatic
assassin who follows Michael Sullivan.
To begin
with, the relationship between Michael Sullivan and John Rooney is excellent,
the former working as a hit man for the latter.
We can see
trouble in paradise at a funeral, where Finn McGovern, one of the people under
the control of the mobster is probably drunk and talks about his late brother
and then starts to rebel against the boss.
So far,
Michael Sullivan is like the son of the leader of this organized crime group and
they even play the piano together…
Up to the
night when he has to do some dirty work with the biological son of the don,
Connor Rooney.
The latter
is an impulsive, out of control, violent, stupid, psychopathic, gruesome, evil
son of John Rooney.
He kills a
man, without a reason, on impulse- just as he often acts- and the unlucky thing
is that Michael Sullivan Jr. is a witness.
And this is
where all hell breaks loose, in a manner of speaking, for the ruthless Connor,
played by Daniel Craig is on the loose.
Wanting to
make sure that there are no witnesses to his murder, he goes to the house of
his associate.
He kills
the wife and the son that he finds at home, with Michael Sullivan Jr.
witnessing part of his new crime.
John Rooney
is beating his son over the head for this, calling him all sorts of names and
saying something like:
-
I curse the day when you were born-
repeatedly and then embracing his son and resolving to help him
Which means
that Mike Sullivan is now on the run and tries first to find some protection
and support with Frank Nitti.
This character
is played by the always excellent Stanley Tucci and he refuses to take the hit
man on board.
What follows
is a one man fight against a big, powerful organization that has money, man
power and bankers working for it.
But Mike
Sullivan figures out that he needs to take the mobsters money from the banks
and he does that with efficiency.
Until they
have a reaction and a man on his heels, Maguire, an individual who like to take
photos of…dead people.
That says
about all and the man is definitely sick, but the way Jude Law decided to
portray him is still a bit farfetched.
There are
some confrontations, from a restaurant along the road to Perdition, to a much
more violent gun fight in a hotel.
This is an
excellent motion picture, directed by Sam Mendes, the creator who gave us
American Beauty, Revolutionary Road and other such masterpieces…
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