Monday, July 23, 2018

REVIEW: Gotti



After my sister and I saw The Karate Kid, we tried having our own little kumite, ending up with me in pain.  Director Kevin Connelly seems to have seen Godfellas, gathered a group of friends, and decided to play 'gangster,' shooting their antics on camera.  If that excites you, then watch Gotti.  If, like a sane human being, that sounds like an awful way to create a movie, then do everything you can to make sure you do not come in contact with this film.

Quentin Tarantino revived the career of John Travolta, helping him get his second Oscar nomination for his performance as Vincent Vega in Pulp Fiction.  After this happened, Travolta was everywhere. No longer did he have to hang his career on the success of the Look Who's Talking franchise (it's crazy to remember that this was an actual franchise).  It wasn't long until there was a dark cloud over his career that came in the shape of Psychlos enslaving man animals in Battlefield Earth.  The film was a wreck of a disaster, and a laugh fest when I saw it in theatres.  Things never seemed to be quite the same as they had been in the 90s, although he was part of a few successful films in the first decade of the new century.  Before long he was in criminally horrid films like Killing Season and The Forger.

This year, things have not managed to look up for this actor who was once so popular that he was in twelve movies across a four year span.  The latest role of Travolta is playing real life gangster John Gotti, a New York mob boss.  I will say this, it seems like ole J.T. is committed to the role and the accent that goes along with it.  While it isn't much better than a stereotypical Italian American accent, it is far ahead of the tripe that he served up in Killing Season.  Still, his performance is miles from any reason to spend even a minute with this film.

Penned by Lem Dobbs and Leo Rossi, the story follows the rise and eventual fall of Gotti.  Frustratingly, director Kevin Connelly uses too many awkward methods for telling the tale.  We get John Travolta book ending the film by looking into the camera and talking, we get narration, and an ice cream headache's worth of flash forwards and flash backs.  Any notion of a flowing story is completely lost in this incoherent mess, using a barrage of techniques that should normally be used sparingly and not in the presence of others.

With all of the jumping around, the makeup department is the unsung hero of this film, working to transform Gotti, but for some reason doing next to nothing to show the age changes of his son, who the story is apparently also about.  By the end of the movie, it is clear that Connelly envisioned John Gotti Jr (Spencer Rocco Lofranco) as a main character with an arc, but, like other elements in the movie, there is no sincere development towards this.

The movie is a mess, the acting is mundane, and the story is a shame.  I counted forty three producing credits listed on IMDB.  That is way too many people involved with this movie who did not slow things down to ensure the script even matched that of a grade twelve creative writing class.  Throughout the film, there is boredom, but it isn't the end of the world.  It is not so crazy offensive that you question the morality of those involved.  And then the movie ends, and you realize that we really should be questioning the morals of these people.

Out of the blue, at the end of the movie, an effort is put forward to turn John Gotti into a saviour.  News style man on the street interviews (yet another jarring narrative technique in the film) show citizens praising the gangster.  As the final few minutes wind down, there is an unshakeable understanding that Connelly and company didn't just want to tell this story, but that they admire this man and want to frame him as a benevolent member of the community.

All ethics aside for a moment, there is only one scene in the entire movie leading up to this that shows Gotti in a positive community light.  He gets one of his thugs to assist an elderly lady, and assures a young man that the local boxing gym won't close.  That's all.  Forty five seconds to establish what turns into the entire effort of the film.  From a purely technical standpoint, this is something that should infuriate the audience.

On an actual human level, this film is disgusting.  John Gotti Sr was a violent murderer.  He ended people's lives.  That is something that for some reason Connelly, Dobbs, and Rossi seem to either overlook, or to commend.  The fact that this movie turns into a shrine to this man is horrendous, despicable, and telling.  To have time, money, and effort put into something that is sincere about making this man into a hero is chilling.  It makes me question the moral compass of these people, and any conclusions that I come to are not flattering to them.

What started as just a sub par film morphs into a dirty little project.  I don't like the idea of writing people off and making judgements about the rest of their career, but I find myself wanting to do that with these people.  This movie is a stain on film making, and any praise that I would have for technical elements like make up are overshadowed by the deifying of a murderer.

Rating - 0 out of 4 stars


6 comments:

  1. My guess is that the insane amount of producers comes from the fact that this movie has been stuck in developmental hell since 2010 and been tossed around to a few different studios (there was a time this movie was going to be directed by Barry Levinson - 'Wag the Dog', 'Bugsy', 'Rain Man', 'Good Morning Vietnam' - and starring Al Pacino, Ben Foster, and Joe Pesci). This seems to be another example of a movie that battles for almost a decade to get finished often turns out to shadow of the disaster that is the production side.

    Believe it or not, Travolta remained a decent little box office draw for a good part of the 2000s with the 2007 box office smash hit 'Wild Hogs' seeming to be the end of his ride, in one of those curious cases of a success being a disaster. Sadly, Travolta's recent filmography seems to drown out his recent good things like having a strong supporting role in the mini-series, 'OJ Simpson vs. the People'.

    It sounds like you have a challenger to 'Game Over, Man' as the worst movie of 2018. Unless this comes to Netflix, I won't be able to decide where it stands for me.

    The most interesting thing about this apparent mess is the Rotten Tomatoes controversy. The user score was suspiciously high compared to the 0% critic rating. It also had a very high amount of user reviews compared to movies that were huge box office hits. Then it was uncovered many of the users were new, registered around the same time, and the only other movie they reviewed was 'American Animals'. Both movies happened to be owned by MoviePass Ventures -- must be a coincidence.

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    1. That's really fascinating about what happened on Rotten Tomatoes. For the majority of the movie, it just wasn't good, but it wasn't going to get zero from me. I just felt dirty that this director seems to sincerely honour a murderer. That and the fact that what turned out to be the point of the film only had forty five seconds worth of screen development made this one a hated film of mine. I believe this is the first year ever to have two movies with zero stars. Hopefully it is the last.

      All of that said, I am hoping for another Travolta resurgence. I don't believe that he's done, and I think there's more gas in the tank. He just needs the right roles and the right directors to work with.

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  2. How many movies have you even given zero stars? United Passions, Gotti, Zolander 2 (?), Cannibal Holocaust, Game Over, Man. Ridiculous Six (?). I think I may be missing one or two.

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    1. Zoolander 2 was a half star. I have also given zero stars to Bucky Larson, and Movie 43. Only seven zero stars out of 980 movies rated. It hardly ever happens. I honestly can't believe it happened twice in one year.

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    2. How many goose eggs have you handed out?

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    3. Trust me, it has been a good year despite that two time zero star accolades.

      My zero stars have gone to 'Zoolander 2' and 'Bucky Laron'. But 'The Open House' was almost there until I changed my mind during the podcast.

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I'm smarter than a bat. I know this because I caught the little jerk bat that got in my apartment, before immediately and inadvertently bringing him back in. So maybe I'm not smarter than a bat.