‘Public Enemies’ Deserves a Second Look
by Chris YogerstMichael Mann’s Public Enemies was one of the most anticipated films of the year (Read my Parcbench review here, John Nolte’s slightly opposing view here). However, it seems that many critics are drastically underrating this film. This is unfortunate because even though the film may not be the gangster movie we are used to; it sure has hints of perfection throughout. After reading many reviews panning this film, I decided to give it a second look.
There were still some obvious flaws. There are a couple of choppy edits as well as questionable music in the scene where Dillinger walks into the cop shop. But the flaws most people discuss don’t seem to be a true flaw at all. I’ve heard and read many people say the film has no depth and the characters are shallow. This is simply not a fair assertion.
The film may appear shallow to some, but it doesn’t give us anything we don’t need to know. That is exactly what makes this film enjoyable; there is no abundance of useless information. It is about Dillinger’s short time as public enemy number one, nothing more.
Halfway through the film I realized something. We don’t have any recent films to make a good comparison with Public Enemies. The market is full of the more modern Scorsese flicks. Of course these films are great, but all take place after 1940. We also have The Godfather saga and DePalma’s updated Scarface, as well as Ridley Scott’s American Gangster, but these are far different than Mann’s film. They are all about more mafia related crime, not bank robbers.
It looks like Michael Mann reopened the classic gangster genre, and it was about time! There are so many great classic gangster films from the studio era such as Little Caesar (1930), The Public Enemy (1931), Scarface (1932), G-Men (1935), and The Roaring Twenties (1939). It would be ten years before we saw the end of the classic genre with White Heat (1949). However, Cagney’s Cody Jarret was more like Baby Face Nelson and less like John Dillinger, who was not a monster like Nelson.
After decades without a film of this sort, Public Enemies gives us a look into the 1930’s like never before. The high definition of the time period is without rival. If anything, this film gives us the most vivid sense of the classic gangster era we have ever seen.
Robert Warshow wrote a famous essay in 1948 about the genre entitled “The Gangster as Tragic Hero.” In it, he discusses the tropes of the classic gangster figure. Warshow states that “the real city, one might say, produces only criminals; the imaginary city produces the gangster: he is what we want to be and what we are afraid we may become.”
This can be directly applied to Mann’s film. Dillinger was very much a product of his environment combined with America’s social and political atmosphere at the time. We don’t see the buildup of the depression or the crime spree that spawned the FBI. We just see the end result once Dillinger decides to take what he feels was taken from him after an unfair prison sentence.
Many of us can understand his hostility, which is what made him a tragic hero of sorts. At the time he was seen as a contemporary Robin Hood, since the banks were viewed as the real public enemy. Mann’s film gives us a story that is less gritty than past gangster flicks but still holds onto some of the characteristics that built the genre.
Also, if you look at pictures and video of the real John Dillinger, you will realize that Johnny Depp was able to emulate every movement of this man as if he really was Dillinger. Even though the scene where he goes into the police station is likely made up, it sure feels real. Depp’s Dillinger is extremely believable; regardless of the depth his character may or may not have.
Many people went into this film with a preconceived notion of what the “idea” of John Dillinger was. Public Enemies is more the story of how that idea wasn’t all that great and how it ended tragically, as it should have. All great gangster stories end tragically.
To refer back to Warshow, the classic gangster’s story should always be an exclamation on the “unlimited possibility of aggression.” Of course, Dillinger was aggressive but also a more humanist bank robber when compared to his counterparts. That is why the public took a liking to him in the first place. Public Enemies gives us a look at such humanist aggression and when stood up next to the classics, it still holds its own.







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33 Comments
Regardless of what peoples opinion's are on this movie… I will definately see it, Dillinger being played by Johnny Depp honestly how bad can that be….. srsly? There is something about that time in the United States.. it was very romantic and must admit, I wish I lived during there time…
I can't get passed the fact that Dillinger fired away with his tommy gun throughout but never shot a single person. (a la Che Guevara)
Talk about shallow characters; why did Bale's character kill himself? If there's no explaination, why tell us at the end of the movie.
That aside, the lighting was terrible. It looked like a UFO was about to land out in the woods. And the sound mix was so bad Michael Mann sat in the theater at the premier with a remote fader and adjusted the sound on the fly.
"Hints of perfection throughout" is precisely the problem with this film. It was uneven, ponderous, and all over the place tonally. Mann seemed willing only to go so far in making an unconventional gangster film, and even with the beautiful cinematography and moral relativism, it's chock full of generic Hollywood pablum: swelling music cues meant to lend a poignancy the script doesn't, a poorly tacked on love story, generic location shoots, &c. I'd agree that the lack of exposition is to the film's credit, but the flat, almost phoned-in performances by Depp and Bale left me wishing for something, anything, to chew on: for dialogue this sparse and a movie this unconcerned with investigating its characters motives, I would've appreciated a little more color from the marquee cast (don't even get me started on Cotillard; I don't think she really wanted to be in this film). Stephen Graham as Baby Face Nelson and Billy Crudup as Hoover stole every scene they were in, and really drew attention to the lifeless performances of Depp & Bale.
I vehemently disagree, however, that this film gives us any insight about or sense of its period or setting, however. Most of the exteriors felt like they could've been filmed anywhere, and other than a few cultural touchstones like Hoover, we're almost adrift in time. This isn't to say that Mann should've beaten us over the head with reminders that we are IN THE DEPRESSION, but he also profoundly failed in trying to evoke the period. We're also for the most part left to wonder about how Dillinger fit into his time and place. Aside from a few context clues, such as letting a bank customer keep his pocket money and a quick mention of the fact that he must curry public favor in order to hide in plain sight, we don't get a sense of Dillinger as Robin Hood, or Dillinger as a public figure at all, for that matter. Depp is believable as Depp with a drawl, but his reticent performance, along with the muddled presentation, never made me think for a moment that he'd managed to capture who(or what-)ever Dillinger may have been.
I thought the movie was terrific. I'm 67 w f born & raised on Illinois-Indiana border.My dad always had mob & ganster stories to tell us. The sound was a little hard to hear. I think sometimes the editors see so much of the film they know the script by heart so they don't even hear it. Love Johnnie Depp. I think he is a fabulouss actor! Didn't know C. Bale but after Public Enemy I did watch Dark Knight. Thought it was great movie also.
This is one of those movies I'm going to get on DVD no matter how good or bad the reviews are. I like the genera and I like Depp and Bale. That's it.
Ahhhh. Warn of spoilers next time. Just ruined it with the Bale reveal. A little consideration, please. SPOILERS ABOVE, PEOPLE!!
He doesn't kill himself in the movie, in real life he did. But in the facts scrolled in the end saying what happens to everyone it says he did like a few years later. So its not spoiled!
Actually, for me, I have to watch all of Michael Mann's film's at least twice. With the exception of Ali, they each got much better the second time.
No, no, no. I think he meant that Christian Bale killed himself in real life, not in the movie. But he's mistaken, it was Jake Gyllenhaal, I think.
Agreed.
Even Miami Vice was much better the second time.
Then there is Heat. I have probably watched it close to ten times and it just gets better. I am amazed at how I still find new things that I didn't notice or connect in previous viewings.
I am a big Mann fan and went into the movie with no expectations and little to no knowledge of Dillinger.
For the next 2+ hours, I enjoyed the film I watched. I read all these reasons why the movie was supposed to be bad and, to be frank, I wonder what movie those people saw.
Of course, it is fine if other people did not like the movie. I just suspect that Mann is a victim of his own success.
After the action of the film has concluded, statements are put up on screen, including one saying that Melvin Purvis died by his own hand. It was clear to me that they meant to imply that there was some latent guilt for the actions just portrayed in the film, but I thought that struck a rather discordant note. I checked the web when I got home from the movie, and indeed the implication might have been a bit facile: http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080...
I loved it. It had all the classic elements of great Mann films. I think the only movie its fair to compare it too in recent years is Road to Perdition, and though it had a different feel I feel both were great films.
Awful movie. The main problem, as with most modern films, is the casting. Christian Bale was not Melvin Purvis. His wooden performance ruined every scene he was in. I know he has a huge following here thanks to "The Dark Knight" but he is a roaring bore as an actor. IMHO "The Dark Knight" succeeded in spite of Bale not because of him. Heath Ledger carried the movie. Gary Oldman and Aaron Eckhardt were better in their roles. So we had to suffer Bale to get a movie that didn't propagandize us, fine! But let's not give him credit he doesn't deserve. Any number of actors could have played that role.
The only reason to see "Public Enemies" was Johnny Depp's performance. Never once did I think he was Johnny Depp. He was Dillinger from the first scene to the end. The "lady in red" was excellent, too, though I don't know her name. (Was she the French actress who played Piaff?) Billy Crudup did a very good job as Hoover because I didn't know it was Crudup until I read it above. He came off as Hoover. Baby Face Nelson was too over the top. He was better portrayed in "O, Brother, Where Art Thou?"
The editing was terrible, just disconnected scenes that had nothing to do with the scene before or after. If possible, the writing was worse. I suspect it was a case of too many writers which seems to be the problem with most movies these days.
All this and I like Michael Mann's movies! For film buffs, it's worth seeing if only to watch Johnny Depp. For Christian Bale fans, he's pretty enough and does his usual posing and emoting. All in all, other than Depp's performance, it is a pretty forgettable movie.
IDEASPHERE!
http://stkarnick.com/blog2/2009/07/post_263.html#...
Historically speaking it's not a very accurate film. But that aside I enjoyed it. Loved the cinematography – edgy and reflective of the times. Depp was – no surprise – incredible. I was afraid they'd make Dillinger into a matinee idol but Depp saved it from becoming that – he gave a nuanced and interesting performance. Played up the arrogance and played down the fact that the public loved Dillinger at the time. He was their hero. I also thought Bale was good – Purvis would have been a serious man for a very serious time and job. I also like the Texans – they didn't say much but boy did they fill the screen.
Intense movie about an interesting part of our nation's history.
The film was just allright, To much time wasted on the contrived love story when everyone knows Dillinger ends up dead at a movie with the woman in red.
Too little time spent on Nelson, Carpis, and Pretty Boy Floyd.
Depp's eye-liner was distracting too.
Left the theater a bit disappointed. First and foremost the story just didn't grab me. I din't find myself carrying about any of the characters, which can make for a long movie. A less than gripping story was not helped by less than engaging acting.
And then there were the technical and production issues. We saw it at a good screen (The Vista on Sunset & Hollywood) but all three of us had problems hearing some of the dialogue. It was inconsistent, so it most likely wasn't a problem with the theaters system.
And then there was the cinematography, which I thought was also very inconsistent. Mann likes to use video – and really made it work in "Collateral" and to a lesser extent "Miami Vice." But those stories are in contemporary settings, not the 30's. Parts of Dillinger looked and felt like an episode of "Cops."
One of the Mann's talents is that he really nails the atmosphere of the place. The coyote in Collateral, the freeways in Heat – for me that atmosphere was lacking in Dillinger. The other folks I went with really liked it, I just didn't connect with it.
And for the record – it has been reported that Dillinger did visit a couple of police stations to admire his wanted posters.
Have seen it twice. It's flat (in my opinion).
watched it, and thought it was an excellent period piece.
Loved Depp.
I don't think his "rock stardom" with the public was emphasized enough. Also, what happened to the "lady in red"? In radio programs and films of the past. the prostitute wore a red outfit to alert Purvis when they exited the Biograph Theater. In addition, his riddled body was on display for the public. One last thing – I almost left the theater during the first five minutes because the jerky closeups from one actor to another made me dizzy – I had to close my eyes. When will directors learn that a portion of their audience is not addicted to MTV or video games? Jerky camera motions ruined the most important scenes of "Pearl Harbor."
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