| Solidifying 1999 as the
Year of the Mob Comedy, Mickey Blue Eyes
is not quite as well-structured as this
springs Analyze This, or as
substantial as HBOs much-lauded series The
Sopranos. But it is full of several charming
performances and very entertaining, nonetheless. Hugh Grant (Notting
Hill) stars as Michael Felgate, a British art
auctioneer at a New York City Sothebys
clone. Despite not having yet met the family of
his girlfriend Gina (played by Jeanne
Tripplehorn, Very Bad Things), Michael
decides to propose after only three months of
courting. He pops the question via doctored
fortune cookie and is shocked when Gina gets up
and flees the Chinese restaurant in tears
immediately following the proposal. (Not to
quibble, but Gina and Michael had reservations at
a finer bistro and didnt make it on time to
keep them - so where did he get the fortune
cookie message?)
Thinking
that she may have gone to her fathers
restaurant, Michael heads to The La Trattoria
(meaning, literally, "the the restaurant")
and meets Ginas father, Frank Vitali (James
Caan, This is My Father), as well as a
myriad of other shady Sicilian characters.
Although everyone hits it off nicely, Michael
becomes a bit suspicious when he stumbles upon a
frosty gentleman in the freezer while trying to
find the bathroom. He is also able to track down
Gina in the bedroom of her childhood home
complete with Duran Duran poster where she
explains that her fear is that her connected
family members will somehow corrupt her honest
and naïve man.
Gina
has good reason to worry. The next day
Michaels art deliveries are early for the
first time ever, thanks to freshly rejuvenated
Teamster drivers. He thinks nothing of it until
Frank suggests that Michael help auction the
painting of the son of his mob boss (played by
Burt Young, Rocky). The picture depicts
Jesus wielding an automatic rifle while executing
what appears to be a mob-like hit. At that
evenings auction, the painting is sold for
$50,000 to someone resembling the man in The La
Trattorias freezer. Within twelve hours,
the FBI is questioning Michael for money
laundering.
Sadly,
Mickey follows the trend of current films
by revealing most of its funny moments in the
trailer especially when Frank tries to
teach Michael to drop the stuffy British accent
to become Kansas City Little Big Mickey Blue
Eyes, a hard-ass Italian gangster. A talking
stuffed gorilla has some of the films best
lines, and Burt Young can elicit laughs just from
peering out from behind his super-thick Harry
Caray glasses.
Mickeys
less-than-stellar production pedigree makes the
film even more surprisingly enjoyable. Writers
Adam Scheinman (Little Big League) and
Robert Kuhn (The Cure) have crafted a
nifty little script that, frankly, could have
used a little less of the romantic plot and a lot
more cursing. Director Kelly Makin (Kids in
the Hall: Brain Candy) packed the cast with
alumni of Analyze This, The Sopranos
and HBOs other fantastic drama series OZ,
as well as Kids cast member Scott
Thompson.
Caan
is wonderful as Frank, and it is truly a joy to
watch Grants Michael abandon his sheepish,
puppy-dog schtick while breaking dozens of laws
trying to cover his own tail. Unfortunately, Joe
Viterelli (the scene-stealing Jelly from Analyze
This) is completely underused in his role.
For that, we will have to wait for the sequel, Analyze
This
Again.
1:42
- for some
adult language, mild violence and slight sexual
content
|