Category Archives: courthouse

Reign Over Me

There have been a number of movies in the last few years focused on people dealing with the emotional devastation of 9/11 and, for the most point, I tend to avoid them as too painful or too likely to be maudlin. Somehow, though, I had the feeling that Don Cheadle and Adam Sandler could be trusted not to make those mistakes.

Reign Over Me, the story of how a lost friend (Cheadle) helps a lost soul (Sandler) come to grips with the loss of his wife and daughters, doesn’t make those mistakes. A terrific supporting cast helps too. Jada Pinkett-Smith, Saffron Burrows, Liv Tyler, Melinda Dillon, Robert Klein, Donald Sutherland and Paula Newsome all add to the total what their roles as family and friends permit.

Particularly surprising was the understated script by writer/director Mike Binder (though not his performance as Sandler’s friend), since his previous work rarely rose above the level of dreck like The Upside of Anger, Man About Town and especially the HBO flop comedy series Mind of the Married Man. Maybe I’m trying find excuse but I think the difference with Reign Over Me is likely down to the influence of the two stars, who produced it.

Mostly I like this movie because the story is primarily about having to go on with life after tragedy rips away the ones you love most, where the events of 2001 are the origin, offscreen, and next about how giving friendship can be repaid many times over in self-awareness.

definitely recommended

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Find Me Guilty

Vin Diesel shows a little range in Sidney Lumet’s courthouse comedy Find Me Guilty, stretching his chops outside the action and semi-action comedy flicks he most often makes. Not that I don’t enjoy both of the linked films, but it’s nice to see Diesel try to move outside the little square Hollywood tries to draw around people to make their investments safer.

I’d probably give the biggest chunk of credit to Lumet. He’s been making terrific films for half century now, a slew of ’50s Golden Age live TV dramas and 1957′s 12 Angry Men (tell me the faceoff between Henry Fonda and Lee J. Cobb isn’t among your favorite mano-a-mano verbal brawls), 1964′s Cold War masterpiece Fail-Safe (Fonda again), the ’70s trifecta of Dog Day Afternoon, Serpico and Network, Paul Newman’s underrated The Verdict and, his last great movie IMO before a run of dogs, River Phoenix’s Running On Empty.

FMG retells the true story of the lengthiest mafia trial in American judicial history when, in the mid-80s, 20 New Jersey members of the Luccese family were prosecuted on 76 criminal counts in a trial that lasted over 21 months. Can you imagine being on the jury for all that time? Me neither. Amusingly, after all the hundreds of witnesses and mounds of evidence the jury only needed 14 hours to get the verdict.

Vin plays Giacomo “Jackie Dee” DiNorscio, a clearly cruel mobster but one who still kept to omerta at a time when it was beginning to break down as others were taking deals and ratting rather than doing time. The Feds offered DiNorscio a deal three times but even after a separate drug bust landed him a 30 year sentence he refused to talk. In fact, of the 20 defendents he was the only one already in prison; he went back to the Manhattan lockup each night while his associates slept in their own beds.

Fed up with attorneys who, after all, did little good as he was railroaded to that 30 year term, Jackie decides to do for himself and this is where the comedy comes from. Lately, when a movie is ‘based on a true story’ you can give it a miss more often than not but Lumet and co-writers T.J Mancini and Robert J. McCrea (both with their first screenplay credit here) deftly take the larger than life mook with nothing to lose, tread carefully around DeNorscio’s awful CV and what in real life was a boring, neverending process and come out the other end with a fairly lighthearted fish out of water comedy.

The opposition, the man who is really the good guy, is a guy who just wants to put some very bad men behind bars, US Attorney Sean Kierney played well by Linus Roache (a Mancunian who almost has the mostly-neutral Mid-Atlantic accent correct). Kierney rightly cannot understand how this chubby, balding mobster is beating him with the jury but Americans have frequently sided with the populist over the intellectual. 21 months is a long time to sit and listen and Fat Jackie, well, he entertained them. He admitted to plenty of crimes, just not the ones for which he was on trial, and was able to shovel some serious dirt on (what Lumet presented as) the most important witnesses.
Good supporting cast too. Alex Rocco, looking really old, as the crew’s boss; Peter Dinklage (Station Agent) as the lead defense attorney (the constant deliberate wheeling out of his podium got annoying after awhile); The Wire‘s Domenick Lombardozzi as an FBI agent and one of the discredited witnesses; Annabella Sciorra as Diesel’s ex-wife who, of course, still has some feelings for him and has them, er, interrupted by guards during a brief jail visit; and, Ron Silver as the judge, his best scenes coming in his office and from riding herd on the very large herd.

recommended

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