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GANGS OF NEW YORK

Diaz comforts Day-Lewis |
"The movie is strange and muddled--a disorganized
epic...There's something movieish and too familiar about this plot,
with its rivalry between good and bad fathers, its suggested Oedipal
tensions. Yet it might have worked if Day-Lewis had anyone to act
with. He doesn't. DiCaprio, muscled up and grim-faced, his finely
cut features fuzzed with a wispy beard, his acquired breasts now
larger than those of his female co-star, settles into a stolid attempt
at macho, and gives a solemn, uncommunicative performance that leaves
one longing for James Cagney's bantam-cock walk...Scorsese is caught
between a film epic's demand for poetry and beauty and his own taste
for rawness and discord. One feels the strain in almost every scene...the
picture, for all its movement, is rarely exhilarating." --David
Denby, The New Yorker
"It is never dull, but I must confess that I wish it were longer,
so that the lives of the protagonists, rather than standing out
in relief against a historical background, were more fully embedded
within it...'Gangs of New York' is an important film as well as
an entertaining one...The director's great accomplishment has been
to bring to life not only the texture of the past but its force
and velocity as well. ..It shows us a world on the brink of vanishing
and manages to mourn that world without doubting the inevitability
or the justice of its fate." --A.O.
Scott, The New York Times
"The film plays like an interminable airplane flight: You look at
your watch, hoping its nearly time to land, only to realize with
a sinking heart you're not even halfway there...when we are not
being bored we are being assaulted by the film's palpable violence...Daniel
Day-Lewis, who apparently listened to Eminem to keep his rage level
up, gives an impeccable performance as the dandified, psychotic
dragon Bill the Butcher...the strongest attitude DiCaprio can manage
is the petulance of a sullen choir boy sulking because he's been
caught filching the Communion wine...Scorsese and his team have
created a heavy-footed golem of a motion picture, hard to ignore
as it throws its weight around but fatally lacking in anything resembling
soul." --Kenneth Turan, The
Los Angeles Times
"...the year's longest and most expensive cinematic disappointment...in
deconstructing an age of gangs and war chiefs locked in rampantly
criminal rivalries, where everyone is a villain and there is nobody
to root for or care about, Mr. Scorsese fails to deliver the necessary
cinematic images that explain the times and embody so many clashing
points of view with coherence...the movie is all style and no substance.
The characters are cutouts from old wanted posters that never come
to life. The graphic horrors are repetitive tableaux." --Rex
Reed, The New York Observer
"As a piece of visionary historical re-creation, with nary a digital
effect in sight, 'Gangs of New York' is stunning...As a dramatic
achievement, however, it is not quite so amazing...What we're left
with has the patness of a history lesson about our roots and the
melting pot and what it means to be an American." --Peter
Rainer, New York
"'Gangs of New York' boasts the year's best film performance by
an actor in Daniel Day-Lewis' tremendous incarnation of the anti-hero
William 'Bill the Butcher' Cutting...But unfortunately, this muddled
epic that attempts to set what is essentially a western in 19th-century
New York City, and to combine it with a tendentious, even dishonest
history lesson, is in other ways a disappointment...Though a voiceover
notes the violence against blacks, the effect as a whole is an egregious
revision of history to rank with 'Birth of a Nation'--and unworthy
of America's most lauded filmmaker." --Jonathan Foreman, The New
York Post
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