Venice fest: Black Mass is Johnny Depp's career best
With a receding hairline, a really bad set of teeth and a spine-chilling gaze that darts across in seamlessly swift movements, actor Johnny Depp gives his career-best performance in Black Mass,
Johnny Depp is no handsome hero in Scott Cooper's blood-curdling crime drama, Black Mass. With a receding hairline, a really bad set of teeth and a spine-chilling gaze that darts across in seamlessly swift movements, our man Depp gives his career-best performance in Black Mass, which just played at the ongoing Venice Film Festival. He is James 'Whitey' Bulger, whose bone-chilling methods in the movie are so very authentically portrayed that one literally forgets that one is watching Johnny Depp, that handsome guy -- who in his earlier gangster films came as mostly dashing and debonair… and utterly lovable.
Johnny Depp in a scene from Black Mass.
Later, he would pulp an informer into a bloody mess, although Bulger himself was one in an unholy alliance with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) -- an alliance that helped him get rid of all the rival gangs in Boston. Really, Depp in Black Mass is nothing like the wistfully sweet charmer one has seen of him in Tim Burton movies.
Based on a book by the same name by Boston Globe journalists, Black Mass tells the story of Bulger, a lowly Irish-American hoodlum from the south side of the city who became a virtual kingpin of the underworld there -- largely because of the help he got from the FBI. An agent from the organisation, John Connolly, who grew up along with Bulger and greatly admired him, persuades the gangster to turn informer in exchange for protection. Bulger is only too happy with this arrangement that helps him bust the Italian mafia and then take over.
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Black Mass is a fascinating portrayal of the Boston underworld of the 1970s. The bad men have long sideburns and long hair, while the FBI agents wear neat-looking suits with broad lapels and ties with huge knots.
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And Bulger wearing blue eye lenses is surrounded by a motley group of men in his Winter Hill gang. We have Earl Brown as Chubby, Johnny Martorano, the group's wily executioner, Stephen as Rifleman Flemmi and so on in a film that is linear and appears delightfully old-worldly.
Depp -- who steals the show from start to finish -- told the press conference that he did try meeting the real Bulger, now in prison. But he refused. His lawyer, however, visited the sets twice and was bowled over by Depp's "impersonation" of Bulger. What more do movie villains need? What more does an actor need?
(Gautaman Bhaskaran is covering the Venice Film Festival.)
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