Showing posts with label Dennis Farina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dennis Farina. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 18, 2024

On this day in television history - Crime Story (1986 - 1988):


Crime Story

was released in the United States on September 18, 1986,
and ran for two seasons until May 10, 1988.


Cast:

Dennis Farina, Anthony Denison, John Santucci, Stephen Lang, Bill Smitrovich, Bill Campbell, Paul Butler, Steve Ryan, Ted Levine, Andrew Clay, Jon Polito, Joseph Wiseman, Darlanne Fluegel, Jay O. Sanders, David Caruso, Julia Roberts, Kevin Spacey, Deborah Harry, Paul Anka, Gary Sinise, Ving Rhames, William Russ, Christian Slater, Paul Guilfoyle, Lorraine Bracco, Michael Rooker, Lili Taylor, Pam Grier, Miles Davis, Dexter Gordon, Stanley Tucci, Lee Ving, Anthony Heald, Bruce McGill, David Hyde Pierce, George Dzundza, Laura San Giacomo, Billy Zane, Michael J. Pollard, William Hickey, Elias Koteas, Dennis Haysbert, Eric Bogosian, Michael Madsen, Vincent Gallo, Armin Shimerman, Jim True-Frost, David Soul, James Remar, Michael Jeter, Steven Weber, Amy Morton, Fred Savage.

Thursday, August 15, 2024

On this day in movie history - Manhunter (1986):


Manhunter,
directed and written by Michael Mann,
based on the novel Red Dragon by Thomas Harris,
was released in the United States on August 15, 1986.
Music by Michel Rubini and The Reds.


Cast:
William Petersen, Kim Greist, Joan Allen, Brian Cox, Dennis Farina, Stephen Lang, Tom Noonan, David Seaman, Benjamin Hendrickson, Michael Talbott, Dan Butler, Michele Shay, Robin Moseley, Paul Perri, Patricia Charbonneau, Bill Cwikowski, Alexandra Neil, Norman Snow, Jim Zubiena, Frankie Faison, Garcelle Beauvais, Joanne Camp, David Allen Brooks, Elisabeth Ryall, Chris Elliott, Gary Chavaras, Chris Cianciolo, Ken Colquitt, Ron Fitzgerald, Dennis Quick, David Meeks, Sherman Michaels, Robin Trapp, L.A. Winters, Daniel T. Snow, Cynthia Chvatal, King White, Mickey Lloyd, Dawn Carmen, David Fitzsimmons, Robert A. Burton, Steve Hogan, Mickey Pugh, Kin Shriner, John Posey, Kristin Holby, Greg Kelly, Brian Kelly, Ryan Langhorne, Hannah Caggiano, Lindsey Fonora, Jason Frair, Bryant Arrants, Christopher Arrants, Melvin Clark, Renee Ayala, Dana Dewey, Stephen Hawkins, Leonard Johnson, Keith Pyles, Michael Russell, Michael Vitug, Pat Williams, Charles Yarbaugh, Bill Smitrovich, Peter Maloney, Michael D. Roberts, Marshall Bell, Gusmano Cesaretti, Melody Gold, Annie McEnroe.

Saturday, July 20, 2024

On this day in movie history - Midnight Run (1988):


Midnight Run,
directed by Martin Brest,
written by George Gallo,
was released in the United States on July 20, 1988.
Music by Danny Elfman.

“There’s a couple of nice-lookin’ people here. Better class of people. Your people. Probably all embezzlers, too.” 
– Robert De Niro, as Jack Walsh.


Cast:
Robert De Niro, Charles Grodin, Yaphet Kotto, John Ashton, Dennis Farina, Joe Pantoliano, Richard Foronjy, Robert Miranda, Jack Kehoe, Wendy Phillips, Danielle DuClos, Philip Baker Hall, Tom McCleister, Fran Brill.

Thursday, February 29, 2024

Born on this day – Dennis Farina:


Dennis Farina


Actor

February 29, 1944 – July 22, 2013

Credits:

Lucky Stiff (2014); Family Guy (2014); Authors Anonymous (2014); New Girl (2013); The Looney Tunes Show (2013); Luck (2011–2012); Doc McStuffins (2012); The Last Rites of Joe May (2011); Knucklehead (2010); Vegas (2008); Bottle Shock (2008); Bagboy (2007); The Grand (2007); Purple Violets (2007); You Kill Me (2007); Law & Order (2004–2006); Justice League Unlimited (2005); Empire Falls (2005); Law & Order: Trial by Jury (2005); Scrambled Eggs (2004); Paparazzi (2004); In-Laws (2002–2003); Stealing Harvard (2002); Big Trouble (2002); Sidewalks of New York (2001); Buddy Faro (1998–2000); Snatch (2000); Bad Seed (2000); Reindeer Games (2000); The Mod Squad (1999); Saving Private Ryan (1998); Buddy Faro (1998); Out of Sight (1998); Bella Mafia (1997); That Old Feeling (1997); Eddie (1996); Get Shorty (1995); Out of Annie's Past (1995); Bonanza: Under Attack (1995); Little Big League (1994); The Corpse Had a Familiar Face (1994); One Woman's Courage (1994); Striking Distance (1993); Romeo Is Bleeding (1993); Another Stakeout (1993); A Stranger in the Mirror (1993); The Disappearance of Nora (1993); Tales from the Crypt (1992); Street Crimes (1992); Mac (1992); Cruel Doubt (1992); We're Talkin' Serious Money (1992); Drug Wars: The Cocaine Cartel (1992); Perfect Crimes (1991); Havana (1990); Men of Respect (1990); People Like Us (1990); Blind Faith (1990); Miami Vice (1984–1989); The Case of the Hillside Stranglers (1989); China Beach (1989); Open Admissions (1988); Midnight Run (1988); Crime Story (1986–1988); Six Against the Rock (1987); Jack and Mike (1986); Manhunter (1986); The Birthday Boy (1986); Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling (1986); Triplecross (1986); Lady Blue (1986); Final Jeopardy (1985); Remington Steele (1985); Code of Silence (1985); Hunter (1985); Hardcastle and McCormick (1985); MacGruder and Loud (1985); The Impostor (1984); American Playhouse (1984); Hard Knox (1984); Through Naked Eyes (1983); Thief (aka Violent Streets) (1981).

Sunday, February 4, 2024

Romeo Is Bleeding (1994) - the pain of regret:


You ever wonder what hell is like? Maybe it ain’t the place you think. Fire and Brimstone. Devil with horns, poking you in the butt with a pitch fork. What’s hell? The time you should have walked, but you didn’t. That’s hell.
– Gary Oldman as Jim Daugherty / Jack Grimaldi.

Atmospheric, intense, suspenseful, seductive, dark, cold, moody, bloody, brutal and brilliant …
Romeo Is Bleeding (1994) is everything I want my favorite noir / neo-noir genre to be.


The movie opens with a one-man pity party.
There’s no pity like self-pity and Jim Daugherty (Gary Oldman) is feeling oh, so sorry for himself.
He leads a very different life to the one he destroyed five years ago.
Now, he’s running a lonely diner off the interstate.
The diner is empty.
After he cleans up, empties ashtrays, he uses the spare time to look through a photo album.
Through flashback and voice-over narration, he takes us through his previous life and the events
leading up to him being here.
We learn who he was before he became Jim Daugherty through the witness protection program.
Before he landed himself in trouble, he was Jack Grimaldi, a sergeant in the NYPD.


He’s a wise-cracking smart-ass with his brains in his balls, and he talks about love – a lot!

Jack Grimaldi:
“Do you know what makes love so frightening? It’s that you don’t own it; it owns you.”

He’s also a serial adulterer.
Nailing any woman willing to give it up to him.
His latest mistress is Sheri (Juliette Lewis), a cocktail waitress who wants Jack to fully commit and make a life with her.


Lust and Greed are the deadly sins that cloud his judgment.
Infidelity and money are his main priorities.

Jack Grimaldi:
“Well, like they say, a man don’t always do what’s best for him. Sometimes, he does the worst. He listens to a voice in his head. What do you know? He finds it’s the wrong voice. That’s what love can do to you.”


Annabella Sciorra is perfect as his long-suffering wife, Natalie, in a controlled, convincing and heart-breaking performance.
When she stands at the refrigerator, turns and points Jack’s own gun at him, her eyes burn and there’s an intense moment of stillness where we hear the mood music rise with the sense of heat in that kitchen, and we’re unsure if she’s actually going to shoot him.
There’s a neat touch with a distant bell tolling in the background; a for whom the bell tolls moment.


She turns it into a jokey gotcha moment, but we can tell the intention was there.
Before she lightens the moment with a smile and a wink, it’s as if she’s thinking: I know what you’ve been doing!
Jack can be romantic with his wife, when he wants to be, with dances under the stars and little gifts.
However, the romantic gestures don’t fool Natalie.
The camera, like the necklace in a later scene, is a guilt gift.
Jack has been up to his old tricks again and Natalie is on to him.
When he gifts her with a brand-new camera, Natalie unwraps it with a knowing look and a sarcastic tone to her voice.


Natalie Grimaldi:
“Okay. Now either I was really good, Jack, or you were really bad.”

Jack asks: “How come you never show me those pictures you take?”
Natalie deflects his question.
It’s not explained whether Natalie has a private detective following Jack, photographing his philandering, or she is tracking Jack herself.
It makes no difference.
Natalie adds the pictures of Jack’s numerous mistresses into the pages of the album, after their wedding photos.
As if to make the point: here’s us at our happiest moment, and the following pages of this album are the gallery of women you destroyed us for.
Natalie is quietly gathering the evidence of his multiple betrayals.
Biding her time.
Leading up to the moment she will leave and divorce him.
The end of their marriage doesn’t happen the way she might have envisioned, when Jack returns home panicked, bloody and missing a toe.


He gives her the half-million in mob blood money he’s collected and sends her out of town with instructions to set up a new home for them to share in the future.
Their farewell scene in the car is perfectly acted, as Jack pleads with Natalie not to abandon him.


Natalie walks out of his life, raising her hand in painful resignation, as she turns to him and says: “See ya when I see ya.”

With his colleagues and the mob, Jack is playing a dangerous game; playing everyone in his life for fools, working both sides against the middle.
He’s part of a team of detectives, liked and respected by his team, but he tips off the mob as to where prosecution witnesses are hidden.


The witnesses are murdered and Jack is paid well for his disloyalty: $65,000 a time,
for every witness he gives up to the mob.
The mob boss is the quietly menacing Don Falcone (Roy Scheider).


Jack thinks he’s got it all worked out, until he meets Mona Demarkov (Lena Olin).


She is caught on a job, arrested, and kept in protective custody until she can stand trial.
Falcone fears Mona will give him up as part of a plea deal.
Lena Olin is perfectly cast as a ruthless stone-cold femme fatale, seductive and cunning, with brains to match her beauty, a killer smile and a maniacal laugh.


Jack tries to distance himself from the mob, but they’ve got him on the dangle.
Jack is in – until Falcone says otherwise.
Jack thinks he can play Mona, the way he plays everyone else in his life, but it’s really Mona who’s toying with Jack.


She sees him for exactly who and what he is.
Mona is smarter than Jack and lethal.
Her movements are precise.
Cat-like.
Almost balletic as she steps, squats and glides around Jack, knowing exactly how to seduce him.


Like the Praying Mantis, Mona kills her men after mating, when she has no further use for them.


In the car scene, leading up to Mona forcing Jack to bury Falcone alive, Mona shares her “first time” experience.


The way she speaks, we’re led to believe she’s talking about the first time she made love to another man,
until she talks about how she closed his eyes, left him there, and returned to her home.
Mona concludes: “I guess you never forget the first time.”
A tear falls from her eye, like it was a beautiful moment in her life,
but she’s really talking about the first time she murdered someone.
Through the brutality, raw emotion is displayed.
Tears are shed by almost all the characters.


We believe their pain and fear because of the high caliber of the acting.
The entire cast of talented character actors shine and deliver powerful performances, including those in supporting or cameo roles: Will Patton, Ron Perlman, Dennis Farina, Tony Sirico, Michael Wincott, David Proval, Larry Joshua, Jay Patterson and James Cromwell.


The story comes full circle with Jack left alone.
A haunted and hollow man.
His career and former life destroyed.
Despised by the colleagues who once respected him.
Cast out to his desert highway exile.
He still hangs on to a tenuous shred of hope, that one May 1st, or December 1st, his wife will walk back into his life.


All will be forgiven.
They can be reunited and make a fresh start.
We – the audience – know it’s never going to happen.
Maybe, deep down, he knows it, too.
But he’ll never admit it.
His wife is gone.
Forever.
But he still hangs on to that hope.
Convincing himself that, even after all that happened, she still loves him.
Jack is in hell.
The hell of his own making.
That faint, futile, tenuous hope, is all the comfort he has left.

Seeing Jack alone at the end of the movie, I remembered a line from the 1970 Joni Mitchell song Big Yellow Taxi:

“Don't it always seem to go
That you don't know what you've got
Till it's gone.”

I get the feeling that song would resonate with Jack, as he sits and rereads the letter he wrote to his long-gone wife, the letter she never received.

In the end, Jack may feel he’s a fool for love, but he’s just a fool to himself.
By the way he treated his wife, it can be argued that, although he talks a lot about love,
he’s too selfish to know what love really is.
He screwed up his chance for true love with Natalie and ended up with nothing but loneliness, shame and the pain of regret.

Romeo Is Bleeding was directed by Peter Medak, written by Hilary Henkin,
and released in the United States on February 4, 1994.

The note-perfect music soundtrack, by Mark Isham, is one of my favorites.
When I first saw the movie during its opening cinema run, I left the theatre, went to a music store, and bought the soundtrack CD straight away.
One of my favorite scenes and sections of music is just over 37 minutes into the movie, where Jack goes to the records department, looks through Mona Demarkov’s file, steals an audio cassette tape from the evidence folder, and listens to the recording in his car.


The music includes atmospheric background swells, emphasizing the sinister undertone.
This is a key scene: Jack discovers the danger Mona poses to him, the extent to which she can manipulate and destroy others … and yet, though his own selfishness and stupidity, he goes along with her regardless.

Romeo Is Bleeding is beautifully filmed, well-paced, impeccably written, compelling and mesmerizingly stylish.

Of the many neo-noir erotic crime thrillers, particularly those made in the 1990s, Romeo Is Bleeding is one of the best.