Mickey Blue Eyes
Once the epitome of illicit power, the post-Gotti mob has declined into a
laughing stock of bumbling ineffectuality. That's a boon not just for law
enforcement but for Hollywood comedy, as the Sopranos-inspired
Analyze This and now Mickey Blue Eyes attest. Once again, lovably
flawed professional hit man bonds with lovably flawed professional wimp, and
clever comic play with the rich cinema traditions of gangsters and luckless
losers ensues.
Phlegmatic, stuttering Hugh Grant takes on the splenetic Billy Crystal role as
Manhattan art auctioneer Michael Felgate, whose self-depreciating British
stodginess has melted before hot-blooded Gina Vitale (Jeanne Tripplehorn).
She's hesitant to marry, though, because her father Frank (an
uncharacteristically subdued James Caan) is a crime boss for the Graziosi
family. Sure enough, once they're engaged, Gina's Uncle Vito (an emaciated Burt
Young) begins to ingratiate himself with Michael, laundering money through his
auction house. Hapless bumbling gives way to homicide, and the film's tone
switches from good-natured farce to feel-good black comedy as Michael and Frank
join forces to extricate themselves from family ties.
In his second film, director Kelly Makin (HBO's The Kids in the Hall)
shows the kind of inventive whimsy that characterized Andrew Bergman's earlier
mob parody The Freshman; Grant being coached by Caan in pronouncing the
Donny Brasco-ism "fegeddaboutit" (he sounds like Schwarzenegger doing
Bugs Bunny) is typical of the film's delight in cultural absurdities. With its
spoof of conventions deepening into genuine suspense and irony in its hilarious
conclusion, Mickey Blue Eyes is a surefire hit. At the Opea House,
Showcase, Westerly, and Woonsocket cinemas.
-- Peter Keough