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Bugsy

Posted : 9 years, 5 months ago on 25 November 2014 01:14

A tiny bit of a mess, Bugsy wants to be both a quiet character study, a loud mafia epic, and a portrait of a doomed love affair, while winding up being mostly a damn fine entertainment. Much of that credit goes to leading man Warren Beatty, a notoriously picky star who hasn’t made as many films as his reputation of Hollywood royalty would suggest. Beatty wouldn’t have to put much effort into making us want to watch him, but his work in Bugsy is completely committed.

This goes a great deal to making Bugsy work, because as written his character is very one-dimensional. The film leans heaviest on a plot for Bugsy to turn the Nevada desert into a wonderland of casinos and a Mecca for gangland behavior. No attention is paid to his back story, so he arrives and remains a bit of a narrowly envisioned enigma. Beatty’s megawatt charisma and background as an untamable bad boy add layers that wouldn’t be there otherwise. Is it a performance because Beatty makes it so flashy, or is it a flashy performance and so great because of sheer movie star strength? It’s probably a bit of both.

Bugsy does have the unfortunate feeling of droning on for a bit too long, and while Beatty and Annette Bening could start forest fires with the way their romantically stare at each other, the story never evolves in a satisfying way. Call me crazy, but I think Bugsy would have been much better if it had focused in on any one of these various plot strands and made it the main focus of the film. As much as I enjoy watching these two romance and betray each other, it repeats itself too much and becomes dull towards the end. If anything, Bugsy could have been a gangster epic on par with any of Scorsese’s 90s great films, but it ends up feeling like an entertainment from another era. One in which its epic length is not matched by a wealth of thematic material and high quality.


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A good movie

Posted : 12 years, 10 months ago on 23 June 2011 10:16

Since I kept hearing some really good things about this movie, I was quite eager to check it out. Well, to be honest, it took me a while to really get into this movie. Basically, the whole thing was at first actually rather murky in my opinion. Indeed, who was exactly Busgy Siegel, who were all those people related to him and why did he actually go to Los Angeles? Fortunately, later on, it became much more obvious and, from that point, I got rather hooked by this story. Indeed, the directing was fine, they managed to give a good feeling of the 40's and all the supporting actors gave very good perfomances, especially Annette Bening. Eventually, the driving force of this picture was definitely Warren Beatty. Indeed, he was a perfect choice to play this character and he gave a real powerhouse performance. Indeed, thanks to Beatty, Bugsy was at the same time charming, manic, visionary and rather fascinating to behold. To conclude, even though I don’t think this movie was really a masterpiece, above all because the whole thing was sometimes rather unfocused, it was still a pretty good movie and it is definitely worth a look, especially if you like the genre. 



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Back Before Vegas Was The City Of Sin

Posted : 15 years ago on 17 April 2009 12:36

Bugsy is a mob flick that doesn't even try to compete with other mob flicks. And therefore, it succeeds as a gangster movie that stands out on its own. It almost completely removes the realistic-type dialogue & the grittiness that is usually associated with this genre. I can almost sense the same sheen that the old black & white mafia films used to use to screen over the mobster characters & give em that "romanticized" look that they became famous for back then. For all their ruthlessness, the major players in this story come off as very likeable people.
And along with Warren Beatty & Annette Benning, you just can't beat the acting by the supporting cast of Harvey Keitel, Ben Kingsley, Elliot Gould & Joe Mantegna.



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