By James Bowman on 9.6.06 @ 12:02AM
Imagine Holden Caufield as the son of a Mafioso...
Even the tag line of Robert Moresco's 10th & Wolf sounds
tired: "The intersection where family, honor and betrayal collide."
Oh, so it's another Mafia movie then. Well, yes, but actually it's
even more tired than that, as it tries to combine a familiar Mafia
tale with the even more familiar theme of the sensitive youth
disillusioned with the corruption and hypocrisy of his elders. I'm
sorry, but I just didn't buy the whole concept of this particular
sensitive youth, who is called Tommy (James Marsden). He struck me
as a fake from the first voiceover about his bitter disappointment
to discover that his father, hitherto his hero, was a "made man" in
the Philadelphia Mafia who "killed people." Dad himself had been
killed when little Tommy was only 12 and, now big and a Marine
serving in the first Gulf War, Tommy says that "He probably
deserved it." Tommy's high-principled disapproval about his
father's occupation is also reflected in his attitude to the war.
So distraught is he to think that the coalition forces have stopped
short of the overthrow of Saddam Hussein that he assaults a
military policeman and steals a jeep, which is why he finds himself
in the brig as the film begins.
Though 10th &Wolf is said to be based on a true
story, none of this rings true to me. What son would say, or think,
that his father deserved to die because of unknown but merely
guessed-at things done to strangers? And though the failure to
topple Saddam Hussein in 1991 may have been regrettable, I don't
remember much agonizing about it at the time -- certainly not among
enlisted men on the ground in Iraq. No, Tommy's pedigree is not so
much Philadelphia Italian as it is European Hemingway. It is the
literary artifice of the embittered and disillusioned hero coming
back from World War I with a chip on his shoulder about the
hypocrisies of the older generation. The breed enjoyed a new lease
of life during the Vietnam era, and fed into the idea of the
corrupt and vicious military establishment that has remained with
us -- or at least with Hollywood -- to this day. Now Mr. Moresco
and his screenwriter, Allan Steele, are trying to squeeze another
iteration of the type out of the Gulf War, the ground phase of
which lasted only a couple of weeks.
Not only is Tommy turned to the bad by George Bush Senior's
failure to nail Saddam, but so is a character called Murtha --
followers of the politics of the current Iraq war will see the
name's significance -- played in a brief cameo by Val Kilmer.
Murtha has no other purpose in the film than to say, as he drowns
his sorrows at the bar: "My kid's dead and Saddam's alive. I don't
understand." The idea of the betrayal of the young by the old was
the earliest version of the self-pity that still lies at the heart
of the youth culture. Nor are dear old dad and the first President
Bush the only elders with whom Tommy remains deeply disillusioned.
He is rescued from the brig and three years of hard labor by a
couple of FBI agents called Horvath (Brian Dennehy) and Thornton
(Leo Rossi) who also turn out to be corrupt. Isn't there anyone a
boy can trust?
Horvath and Thornton offer Tommy his freedom in exchange for
help in infiltrating the Philadelphia mob, one of the rising stars
of which is Tommy's own cousin Joey (Giovanni Ribisi) -- and in
bringing down a particularly dangerous Sicilian gangster and heroin
importer called Reggio (Francesco Salvi). Tommy may affect to
despise the Mafia, but he ain't no rat, see? He angrily refuses to
play stoolie for the Feds, even if it means doing hard time in a
military prison, until they tell him that his kid brother Vincent
(Brad Renfro), led astray by Joey, is headed for the pen himself
unless he, Tommy, does the government's bidding.
The bond between Tommy, Joey and Vincent, you won't be surprised
to learn, goes back to early childhood, and a flashback to their
brawl with a rival gang in a diner in 1984 establishes their
relationship as being of the closest. To the admiring Brandy (Piper
Perabo), the young widow of Tommy's predecessor as the FBI mole in
Joey's gang (Joey found out), they had seemed "like the Three
Musketeers, but without the costumes." Joey is a study in light and
dark and so a more interesting character than the unidimensional
Tommy or Vincent, but he too has a beef with the older generation
that reaches even as far as the Italian heritage to which, at a
significant moment, he is said to be a disgrace. Joey's American
high-spiritedness and skepticism are contrasted with the Old World
brutality and high culture of Reggio and his gang. The latter must
be the worst kind of Mafia don because he is an opera-lover, and we
see him weeping at an informal performance, at his own dinner
table, of the climax of Leoncavallo's Pagliacci. Joey
leans over to Tommy and whispers: "It's a f****** clown!"
This is one of several ways in which the film displays what
might seem a gratuitously philistine and xenophobic aspect. Joey
proudly announces that he speaks only "American" and not Italian
and later guns down another Sicilian as he tries to teach Italian
to Vince. When the inevitable war with Reggio finally begins, Joey
cries: "F*** these f****** foreigners!" What is all that about?
Perhaps, just as The Godfather Parts I and II back in the
1970s reflected the American immigrant experience in the early part
of the 20th century, so 10th & Wolf is meant to
express the neo-nativism of the third and subsequent generations of
immigrants in the early part of the 21st. It's the only reason I
can think of why anyone would have bothered to make it.
topics:
Hollywood, Military, Iraq