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Published: Friday, February 27, 2009

Tough 'Gomorrah' refuses to romanticize mobsters

  • Marco Macor plays a teenage wannabe gangster in "Gomorrah."

    IFC Films

    Marco Macor plays a teenage wannabe gangster in "Gomorrah."

It's no surprise the younger hoodlums in "Gomorrah" run around pretending to be Al Pacino in "Scarface." They've absorbed the romance of gangster movies.

As though offering corrective medicine, this scathing Italian film has no romance in its criminal saga.

It's not just that there are no warm-hearted godfathers blathering on about the proper amount of garlic in the marinara sauce; this movie doesn't even allow you the basic pleasures of a story unfolding in linear fashion.

Instead, we're dropped pell-mell into the ugly, violent world of the Camorra, a Mafia organization in and around Naples (their name allows the filmmaker to reference the biblical yarn about a corrupt city in his title).

A handful of different story lines weave through the film, including one about those two teenage gangster-wannabes, who make the mistake of thinking that they can parlay a cache of guns into the beginnings of their own little empire.

Not a good idea. In this arena, naivete will get you a permanent home in a ditch.

Other threads include a tailor working under the Camorra heel, whose factory exploits cheap-working immigrant workers, and a longtime mob operator whose underling might just be seeing the truth about this diseased system (their particular specialty is toxic waste, which they spread around like candy).

Except for the Pacino fans, most of the characters are middle-age men, and I have to confess that, especially with the different pieces of plot coming from all directions, it took me a long time to tell these various characters apart, let alone piece together their stories.

"Gomorrah" obviously isn't designed to make it easy for the viewer; it doesn't seek to engage us, and it's not in any sense entertainment, in the traditional sense.

It is horrifying, though. And the dangerous locations in which director Matteo Garrone did his shooting leave little doubt about the movie's credibility on the subject of real-life issues that have made this section of Italy a hotbed of murder and corruption.

"Gomorrah" failed to get an Oscar nomination for best foreign-language film, a category run by a relatively small group of voters who tend to like conventional pictures (it's one of the only Oscar categories where the voters must actually watch the movies they're voting for).

The omission isn't surprising -- this is a tough film that doesn't pull punches -- but it still looks like an oversight.

"Gomorrah"

No punches are pulled in this grungy account of the real-life Mafia in Naples, a film without warm-hearted godfathers or the romance of gangster pictures. Multiple story lines run through Matteo Garrone's study of a diseased system, all shot in locations that give little doubt of the movie's credibility on the subject. (In Italian, with English subtitles.)

Rated: Not rated; probably R for violence, subject matter.

Showing: Guild 45th

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