Analyze This
As a tough guy Robert De Niro has been an indomitable cinematic presence over
the years. When he's strayed beyond the genre (Awakenings and
Midnight Run), it's always been a tad unsettling to witness a kinder,
gentler De Niro on screen. Harold Ramis's film is one of these latter vehicles
that tartly leverages De Niro's "wise guy" shtick for some uproarious laughs,
whether it's his Mr. V. (a New York City crime boss, ostensibly fashioned after
John Gotti) making a thuggish retort to his shrink (Billy Crystal in his best
role since City Slickers) after learning the Freudian definition of
"Oedipal complex" -- "Freud was a sick fuck and so are you" -- or a
delightfully cheesy dream sequence where the duo re-enact the infamous
fruit-market hit scene from The Godfather.
But for every gag that De Niro and Crystal pull off -- and they do have
comedic chemistry -- the script strands them in eddies of frivolity. First
there's Mr. V.'s disorder: he's been a hard-ass don for years, and suddenly
he's afflicted by panic attacks because of a turf skirmish and the big upcoming
mob meeting? Then there are his bouts of emotional weakness: not only are these
moments awkward and poorly orchestrated, but even in a comedy, it's a stretch
to watch De Niro cry. Analyze This plays The Godfather bit fast
and funny, it just picked a framework it should have refused. At the
Showcase, Starcase, Tri-Boro, Westerly, and Woonsocket cinemas.
-- Tom Meek
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