Maybe
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Jon Hamm negotiates a hostage release in war-torn Beirut in this uneven drama. Is it worth $10? No ...
Johnny Depp is ferocious in this Whitey Bulger biopic.
Is it worth $10? Yes
Johnny Depp needed this. After the critical and box office failures of “The Lone Ranger,” “Transcendence” and “Mortdecai,” Depp needed a win and gets one with “Black Mass,” a solid drama in which he gives arguably the best performance of his career (the first “Pirates of the Caribbean” is still my favorite). Considering the work he’s done for the last 25 years, that’s saying quite a bit.
Depp plays infamous Boston Mafioso James “Whitey” Bulger, an Irishman who rose from petty street thug to number two on the FBI’s most wanted list behind Osama Bin Laden. What’s fascinating about the movie, which is based on Dick Lehr and Gerard O’Neill’s book “Black Mass: The Irish Mob, The FBI and A Devil's Deal,” is the way the FBI allows Jimmy (as he was known to family and friends) to drug traffic, racketeer and murder in exchange for information regarding Boston’s underground. The idea is for it to be mutually beneficial (Jimmy gets federal protection, the FBI takes down Boston’s other criminals), but as soon as Jimmy starts taking advantage of the situation it becomes an ethical abomination for the feds.
For as stellar as the performances are, the movie is noticeably void of filmmaking technique. The picture is dry and staid – the production design and costumes, while authentic, do little to feed “life” into the story. A more dynamic visual style – quicker edits, an engaging musical score, something other than an objective point of view, and creative camera angles – easily would’ve added dramatic punch and made the film more captivating. This is director Scott Cooper’s (“Crazy Heart”) fault, and will probably be the reason “Black Mass” isn’t better considered come awards season.
Still, Depp’s performance alone is enough to make it worth watching. “Black Mass” is palatable entertainment drawn from real-life headlines for our amusement, and in that limited capacity it successfully serves its purpose.
Did you know?
Sienna Miller filmed an extended cameo playing Jimmy’s girlfriend, but those scenes were cut from the film.