“I swear to Jesus Christ on the goddamned cross,
that kid thinks he’s makin’ a jerkoff outta me, I’m gonna break his leg!” That’s
what loan shark Michael (Richard Romanus) hisses at one point in Martin
Scorsese’s breakthrough movie, Mean
Streets, and the line encompasses nearly everything that distinguishes Mean Streets—indeed, it encompasses
nearly everything that defines Scorsese as a kingpin of New York crime cinema.
The line blends Catholicism with macho swagger, vulgarity, violence, and the
moral code of the Italian-American underworld. All of those themes pervade Mean Streets, which was Scorsese’s first
“real” feature after helming the grungy black-and-white indie Who’s That Knocking at My Door? (1967)
and the lurid Roger Corman production Boxcar
Bertha (1972). With its bravura camerawork, naturalistic performances, and
thundering soundtrack, Mean Streets
put Scorsese on the map.
The picture was also his first collaboration with actor
Robert De Niro, because even though the star of Mean Streets is actually Harvey Keitel—who also had the top role in
Who’s That Knocking at My Door?—De
Niro gives the picture’s most flamboyant performance, and his live-wire energy
is the film’s pulse.
Written by Scorsese and Mardik Martin, the movie tells a
simple story about Charlie (Keitel), a low-level mobster whose ascension
through the Mafia’s ranks is impeded by the destructive behavior of his best
friend, Johnny Boy (De Niro). Arrogant, immature, and impulsive, Johnny Boy
flagrantly rips off one loan shark after another, displays contempt for
underworld authority figures, and relies on Charlie—whose uncle holds a
position of power in the Mafia—to bail him out of trouble whenever things get
too intense. Complicating the dynamic between the men is Charlie’s romantic
involvement with Johnny Boy’s cousin, Teresa (Amy Robinson). As the movie
progresses, Charlie wrestles with his various obligations—to Johnny Boy, to
Teresa, to his uncle, and to God (since he’s a devout Catholic), trying and
failing to be everything to everyone.
Mean
Streets is a movie of unassailably noble intensions, because Scorsese is
after nothing less than defining the soul of a community. By examining various
characters who represent different facets of New York mob life, the director
ponders the enigma of men who treat each other with honor while stealing from
the rest of the world. Furthermore, Scorsese’s camerawork and direction of
actors are consistently remarkable. The camera whips and whirls around scenes
to accentuate the volatility of situations; the quick editing and imaginative
use of pop songs and classical music on the soundtrack gives the movie a unique
rhythm; and the performances all feel so naturalistic that many scenes seem as
if they were improvised. All of Scorsese’s preternatural gifts are on full
display here.
Unfortunately, so are his weaknesses.
The depiction of women in
the film is outrageously sexist (both by male characters and by Scorsese, who
needlessly includes leering nude scenes); the show-offy auteur flourishes, like
scoring a fight scene with the peppy Motown song “Please, Mr. Postman,” are fun
but distracting; and the constant barrage of “fucks” within dialogue gets
tiresome. The biggest shortcoming of Mean
Streets, however, is also the film’s key virtue—the fact that the picture
is an anthropological study of assholes. Dimensional though they may be, the
characters in this film are still inherently awful people, criminals driven by
greed, id, and a lack of social conscience. Scorsese captures these people
better than anyone else, but the question remains whether low-rent scumbags
actually deserve this sort of close attention.
Mean
Streets: GROOVY
3 comments:
"Scorsese captures these people better than anyone else, but the question remains whether low-rent scumbags actually deserve this sort of close attention."
I seem to recall Ebert saying much the same thing about Goodfellas on Letterman back in '90 or '91.
^People said the same thing about Taxi driver, Raging Bull, hell that's all anybody talked about in Wolf of Wall Street. Scorsese has spent a large part of his career casting a light on low-rent scumbags.
I have yet to see any Scorsese film that I would ever want to see again.
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