Deuces
Wild
review by Cynthia Fuchs, 3 May 2002
Bring Da Pain
It's da summer of 1958 and Brooklyn's Deuces are at
war with a rival gang. Theirs is a long-running conflict, and for
the Deuces' charismatic leader, Leon (Stephen Dorff), the stakes are
deeply personal. You know this because the film opens with a scene
so broadly operatic you might mistake it for parody. As rain pours
down and thunder crashes, Leon staggers down the street to his
mother's house, carrying his brother's dead body. Arriving on her
stoop, he collapses, his face turned up to the torrents of rain, his
cries so terribly plaintive: "Maaa! Maaa!"
All the while,
Leon's younger brother, Bobby (Brad Renfro), looks confused, part
anguished, part uncomprehending, part resentful. It's a complex
moment (and recalls Renfro's similarly strong performance last year
in Larry Clark's Bully), and it almost saves this first scene
from looking as utterly ridiculous as it does. Alas, there is no
saving it, and the rest of Deuces Wild careens quickly into
self-parody without even seeming to be aware it's happening.
Directed by
Scott Kalvert, whose previous film was the more earnest, more
perversely nimble Basketball Diaries (1995), Deuces Wild
is a heavy-handed glob of a movie. Quite unable to get out of its
own way, it invests heavily in its characters' posturing and
longing. "Every kid wants to be James Dean," says Renfro of his
role, and this is, indeed, what the film appears to be about, that
"universal" desire to be a famously moody and self-destructive movie
icon. And so, the boys -- the Deuces and their sworn enemies, the
Vipers -- all look and act alike. Young toughs, Italian guys with
names like Philly Joe and Jimmy Pockets, they wear those
straight-bottomed shirts with open collars or tight t-shirts with
rolled sleeves, shine their shoes and slick their hair, and hang out
with girls in ponytails, pedal-pushers, and red lipstick. They spend
their days arguing about the Dodgers' move West, or standing on
street corners, usually near pizza joints, and stare each other
down.
Because the
Deuces and the Vipers argue over turf -- mostly the aforementioned
street corners, and sometimes even whole blocks -- you might imagine
that they are relevant. Like, maybe they're duck-tailed parallels to
today's turf quarrelers. Or perhaps they're model bullies, with some
insight to offer about the ways that kids (however old they are)
seek their identities in damaging others. But any of that would be a
stretch. Deuces Wild is so dated, in concept and execution,
that it's hard to take any of the characters or situations as
seriously as they take themselves. It even features Matt Dillon as a
local kingpin named Fritzy Zennetti, a character seemingly plucked
right out of Dillon's own 1980 gang film, My Bodyguard,
without taking time even to change his costume or rethink his sneer.
Fritzy's scheme
brings all kinds of pain to Leon, who's been trying to get over Dead
Brother, who, by the way, died of a drug overdose, as well as take
care of Bobby and their Ma (ragingly alcoholic since Dead Brother's
death), as well as be a good helper to the local priest, Father Aldo
(The Sopranos' Vincent Pastore, looking predictably
uncomfortable in his frock). He's trying to be a good role model for
Scooch (Frankie Muniz), whose own dad, a drunk, of course, beats him
when he asks for money for a pretzel. And one more thing, Leon's got
a vavoomy, high-maintenance blond, Betsy (Drea DeMatteo), whose
bullet bra and saddle shoes are only setting her up for a violent
abuse scene. Really, the poor fellow has too much pressure on him,
even for a James Dean clone.
As if all this
isn't enough, Fritzy just disrespects the heck out of Leon. When the
latter asks Fritzy to make his case (Please don't bring drugs into
the neighborhood, you know I'm touchy about them because my brother
died of an overdose, etc.), Fritzy blows him off royally: "Go wear
your shirts, sing your songs, do whatever the f*ck it is that you
kids do." Maybe Fritzy's just mad because Leon's Matt Dillon
imitation is so weak.
In any event,
Leon takes all this pretty hard, mainly because he knows that
Fritzy's being egged on by Leon's arch-enemy, Marco (Norman Reedus),
just out of jail for selling drugs to Dead Brother (who actually
does have a name, Al). And oh yes, a few other guys hang around
making trouble for Leon and Bobby, namely the snively wannabe Jimmy
Pockets (Balthazar Getty), who wants only to beat down the Deuces so
he can get in good with Marco. He's mainly in the picture, though,
so that his kid sister, Annie (Fairuza Balk), might throw a wrench
in Bobby and Leon's lives.
That is,
Deuces Wild treads heavily into Romeo and Juliet/West
Side Story territory, where it plainly has no business going.
While this conflict does help, in one instance, to enrich the
Bobby-Leon dynamic (they have a serious talk about the relationship
in their little, shared bedroom, and they actually look like
brothers rather than sock-hop posers, for a minute), for the most
part it's a trumped up plot device, and the brothers spend too much
time looking like any other set of brothers in any other movie just
like this one.
Annie's
contribution to Bobby's dilemma, aside from being the enemy's
sister, is that she is desperate to get outta town, to rescue her
crazy, Christmas carol-singing mom (Debbie Harry) from the poverty
and meanness and frankly, the overweening masculinity of their
neighborhood. She convinces Bobby to help them escape, and of
course, his not very well-considered scheme leads to tragedy. It's
not hard to guess which brother pays the Big Price, and which
actually Gets Out. It's more difficult to figure why anyone signed
on for this project, which has reportedly on the shelf for a year,
but feels more like it's been there for, oh, twenty. |
Directed
by:
Scott Kalvert
Starring:
Stephen Dorff
Brad Renfro
Fairuza Balk
Matt Dillon
Balthazar Getty
Frankie Muniz
James Franco
Written by:
Paul Kimatian
Christopher Gambale
Rated:
R - Restricted.
Under 17 requires parent
or adult guardian.
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