Terrible writing. Many intellectual
insults. The length can be reduced considerably.
1.
"I think that work like
his is necessary for people to understand something about the ["]humours["]
of the criminal mentality," said Robert Mitchum of the novel, The Friends
of Eddie Coyle, by George V. Higgins.
2.
Yet he could have been
describing the film itself, (Naturally, because the film is faithful to the
novel.) a melancholy succession of clandestine encounters conducted in the
least picturesque parts of the Greater Boston area during late fall, going into
the winter.
3.
A middleman bargains with a
gunrunner,
4.
the gunrunner bargains with a
pair of wannabe (Wrong word.) bank robbers,
5.
a cop bargains with his stoolie
[informant],
6.
and the stoolie [informant]
bargains with the man who works for the Man.
7.
The chips on the table may be
machine guns or information or money, but the "humour" looming over
every encounter is survival.
8.
Politeness
and bonhomie are strictly provisional and everybody knows it, (accurate) which is what give this film its terrible sadness.
9.
In the miserable economy of
power in Boston's rumpled gray underworld, Eddie and his "friends"
are all expendable, and the ones left standing play every side against the
middle, their ["]white-knuckle terror["]
carefully concealed under several layers of nonchalance and resignation.
(accurate)
10. There's not a punch thrown and only two fatal shots are fired but this seemingly artless film leaves a deeper impression of ["]dog-eat-dog["]
brutality than many of the blood-soaked extravaganzas that preceded it and came
in its wake. (I agree.)
11. The Friends of Eddie Coyle is, in many ways, an inside job.
12. Meaning that there's not a minute spent orienting the viewer.
13. The tale of a low-level mobster who gives up one of his contacts in
a failed effort to bargain his way out of a New Hampshire prison stint is
imparted to us a little bit us at a time through a series of seemingly affable
but quietly desparate sit-downs between criminals and cops or other criminals
in crumy coffee shops, underpopulated bars, and public spaces that give new
meaning to the word ordinary. (This paragraphs insults the reader's
intelligence, which means that he thinks this is insightful.)
14. The filmmakers never do anything in the way of rhetorical
underlining.
15. Director Peter Yates, born and trained in England and mostly known
at this relatively early point in his career for his 1968 film Bullitt (and, to
those fortunate enough to have seen it in the States, for the excellent Robbery),
was an interesting choice for this material. (Another unnecessary biographical
informations which insult the reader.)
16. Like that Steve McQueen classic, The Friends of Eddie Coyle is an
all-action experience. But two crisply executed bank heists and a logistically
complex (I disagree.) parking-lot arrest aside, the kinetic excitement here is
sparked by the verbal and gestural rhythms between the actors as they plead for
their lives across dingy Beantown tabletops.
17. Yate's camera eye stays so casually observant and his cinematic
syntax so spare throughout that when he finally retreats to a plaintive
distance in the aftermath of the film's one inevitable tragedy, it packs a
considerable punch. At which point, Dave Grusin's score (FuckingA.), the
busiest thing in the movie apart from the gunrunner's patterned shirts and
canary yellow muscle car, finally settles in to a plangent farewell.
18. Offhanded fatalism is embedded in every word of every exchange, each
of which alternates between hide-and-seek games and verbal tugs-of-war.
19. The Friends of Eddie Coyle is an extremely faithful adaptation (in
structure, spirit, and flavor) of the first published novel by the Brockton,
Mass.-born Higgins, whose career as a [Assistant] US prosecutor [US Attorney]
and then big-time criminal defense lawyer (his clients included Eldridge
Cleaver and G.Gordon Liddy) coincided with his ascendancy as a novelist, (Another
unnecessary biographical information which insult the reader) and whose
dialogue is one of the glories of American Lit. (American=US, Imperialism)
20. "I'm not doing dialogue because I like doing dialogue,"
Higgins once said. "The characters are telling you the story. I'm not
telling you the story, they're going to do it. If I do it right, you will get
the whole story."
21. What is remarkable about the film is the extreme degree to which
Yates and the producer and writer, Paul Monash, adhere to Higgin's aesthetic,
banking on the contention that, if you render the action among the characters
as faithfully as possible, their entire moral universe will be revealed.
22. And so it is. "Look, one of the first things I learned is never
to ask a man why he's in a hurry," says Robert Mitchums Eddie to Steven
Keats's inappropriately relaxed arms salesman, Jackie Brown (guess who's a fan
of this movie)(Another insult), in what might be the film's most emblematic bit
of table talk."All you got to know///." As in every good
dialogue-driven film, talk in The Friends of Eddie Coyle equals action. In this
case, maœuvering for leverage and self-preservation.
23. Nothing could be further from Higgin's full-immersion approach to
fiction than a collection of prima donna thespians vying for attention; thankfully,
The Friends of Eddie Coyle is a true ensemble piece ["]if ever there was
one["].
24. It's amazing that a star of Robert Mitchum's caliber even considered
this movie (he was originally offered the role of the bartender); that he
integrated himself so fully into the ensemble and the working-class Boston
atmosphere is some kind of miracle. (Miracle? The fuck does this mean?)
25. Mitchum is on-screen for roughly half of the movie and, never for a
moment, does he or the filmmaker play the ["]movie star card["], no
special isolated "moments", no hammy ("of acting or an actor,
exaggerated or over-theatrical", unnecessary adjective) overplaying or
sneaky (Another unnecessary adjective.) underplaying.
26. Golden-age Hollywood's most notorious bad-boy arrived in Boston,
ready for action on every front, as amply chronicled by Grover Lewis in his
Rolling Stone profile "The Last Celluloid Desperado".
27. Apart from the usual shenanigans (think blondes and booze), Mitchum
went right to work, getting an "Eddie Coyle haircut" (which might
have been executed with a lawn trimmer) (It is possible that it is his attempt
at humour. Whether or not it is, it is not funny.) and alledgedly hanging out
with the notorious Whitely Bulger, and his Winter Hill Gang.
28. Higgins was worried, Mitchum was unfazed. "It's a two-way
street," he told Lewis, "because the guys Higgins means are
associating with a known criminal in talking to me."
29. Apart from a few slippages here and there, Mitchum mastered the
exceptionally difficult Boston accent. (What is Boston Accent?)
30. More importantly, he found the right loping rhythm, the right level
of spiritual exhaustion, the right amount of cloaked malevolence.
31. If Mitchum betrays anything of himself as Eddie, it's his sense of
poetry, which, for roughly three-fourths of his career as an actor, seems to have
manifested itself off- and on-screen.
32. But when he rose to the occasion, he was one of the best actors in
movies.
33. Thinks like a poet, acts like a jazz musician, hitting on the
perfect melancholy chord progression from his initial appearance and playing
quitely dolorous variations right to the end.
34. Of course, he's surrounded by a beautiful array of character actors,
many of whom have faded from memory over the years.
35. Richard Jordan as Agent Dave Foley, decked out in leather and a hip haircut, with
his usual pungent combination of sweet and sour.
36. Peter Boyle's bartender, a swaybacked, bald-headed giant(?) in jacket, V-neck
sweater, and open-collared shirt, cultivating an air of relaxed barrrom
stoicism as he mentally angles his way through every difficulty.
37. The unhealthy looking Steven Keats as Jackie and the
unhealthier looking Jack Kehoe as his connection, decorating the film with their peculiar brands
of hopped-up intensity (well oiled and dry as dust, respectively). (The fuck
does this mean?)
38. The smooth-skinned and bullet-headed James Tolkan, a Lumet favorite, as the
messenger boy for the Man ("The Man wants//.").
39. Iron-haired and square-jawed Mitchell Ryan, one among an
army of unhinged authority figures in early seventies cinema, doing a walk-on
as police brass.
40. Joe Santos of the sunshine smile, who later made a name for himself on The
Rockford Files, as a member of the bank heist crew.
41. His partner is played by Alex Rocco, and if Rocco appears to
live and breathe his role as a low-level criminal, that's because he came into
this world as Alexander Pe-tri-cone,
Boston born and bred, and otherwise known as Bobo.
Petricone worked on the fringes of the Winter Hill Gang and then skipped town
for Los Angeles, where he took off(?) weight, changed his name, converted to
the Baha'i faith, and started a career in acting.
42. The legend goes that Bulger and his crew never knew what had
happened to Petricone until the night they went to see The Godfather, in which
their old friend made a splash as Moe Green, the Las Vegas kingpin who takes a
bullet in the eye. (Another insult)
43. These actores, then in their prime, now signify a lost era.
44. Many are dead, (Naturally.)
45. Boyle after successful and brilliant career,
46. the Harvard-educated (Another insult) Jordan far too early from a
brain tumour,
47. Keats by suicide before he turned fifty.
48. All of them worked hard at their craft and put flesh and muscle on
an entire era's worth of movies.
49. With the notable exception of Boyle, few ever
found roles as good as the ones they played here.
50. For someone who was a thirteen-year-old movie fan when The Friends of
Eddie Coyle came out, it's a haunting experience to look again at these actors,
still up-to-the-minute in my time-bound memory.
51. When we weren't paying attention, they each slipped like ghosts into
a past that, from an official vantage point, now seems as distant as the Civil
War. (He thinks that there is no difference between 1970s in US and (US Pre-Civil
War, US Civil War, and its aftermath). To him, Past, in Historical sense, only
has one meaning.)
52. The conditions that allowed for movies as spare
and melancholy as this one are long gone, very few current American (American=US. It means he lives in "his own little world") moviemakers find it possible, or even desirable, to leave
their action so unadorned.
53. It's strange to remember that the seemingly loose, but actually
rigorous, style of naturalism practiced by Yates and Monash and their brilliant
cast was as tied to the modernity of its own moment in time as the CGI-driven
epics of today are tied to theirs.
54. On another level, for those of us who grew up in Mass., the film now
functions as a time achine. (I know exactly what he means.)
55. With a few exceptions (Starting Over, The Verdict, The Departed),
the city of Boston has rarely been as well served in movies.
56. Young film fans raised in the multiplex era might
look back and lament the fact that no one is making movies like The Friends of
Eddie Coyle anymore. (accurate)
57. The truth is that they never did.
58. There's only this one. (Great possibility of error.)
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