Gangster Squad

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Gangster Squad
Gangster Squad Poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Ruben Fleischer
Produced by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Screenplay by Will Beall
Based on Tales from the Gangster Squad
by Paul Lieberman
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Music by Steve Jablonsky
Cinematography Dion Beebe
Edited by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Production
company
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Distributed by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Release dates
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  • January 11, 2013 (2013-01-11) (United States)
Running time
113 minutes[2]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $60 million[3][4]
Box office $105.2 million[4]

Gangster Squad is a 2013 American action crime thriller film directed by Ruben Fleischer and written by Will Beall. It stars Josh Brolin, Ryan Gosling, Nick Nolte, Emma Stone, and Sean Penn.

The story is loosely based on the Los Angeles Police Department officers and detectives who formed a group called the "Gangster Squad unit" who attempted to combat Mickey Cohen and his gang during the 1940s and 1950s. It was originally set to be released September 7, 2012,[5] but in the wake of the 2012 Aurora shooting, the release date was changed to January 11, 2013 by Warner Bros. Pictures.[6] When in fact the film, the characters, and the events are mostly fictionalized, the LAPD did have a unit called the "Gangster Squad" which was created when Clemence B. Horrall was the LAPD's Chief of Police.[7] A similar theme is the basis of a 1996 film, Mulholland Falls, which Nolte also appeared in, and a 2013 television miniseries, Mob City.

Plot

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. In 1949 Los Angeles, gangster Mickey Cohen wants to control all organized crime and argues with local mobster Jack Dragna that they should not allow the East coast mafia to run the town. Meanwhile, LAPD Detective Sergeant John O'Mara raids a Cohen-owned brothel to save a woman from being raped, gaining the attention of Police Chief Bill Parker. Parker believes that more drastic measures need to be taken against men like Cohen, and tasks John to begin waging a guerrilla campaign against the mobsters. He tells John (a former OSS commando during World War II) to use his special operations training, learned at Camp X during World War II, and to select a small team that will work without badges or official support from the police.

John's pregnant wife Connie suggests choosing unorthodox veterans like himself, as young high-performers would likely already be on Cohen's payroll. With Connie's help, John selects a small squad of cops: street officer Coleman Harris, wiretap expert Conwell Keeler, gunslinger and sharpshooter Max Kennard, and Kennard's partner Navidad "Christmas" Ramirez. John also attempts to recruit his partner Sergeant Jerry Wooters, but Wooters has become lazy and complacent in his job and refuses. Wooters keeps in touch with childhood friend Jack Whalen, who provides him with information on Cohen. Wooters also meets and begins a secret relationship with Cohen's etiquette tutor Grace Faraday.

The squad's first mission is to bust up an illegal Cohen casino in Burbank, California, but things quickly go bad as John and Harris are captured by corrupt Burbank police who were guarding the casino. Wooters has a change of heart after witnessing the death of a young boy he had been helping out and attempts to shoot Cohen. Whalen stops him and tells him that John is going to be turned over to Cohen, prompting Wooters to rescue the men from the Burbank jail. Deciding that they need more information on Cohen's operations, Wooters and Keeler break into Cohen's house and place an illegal wiretap inside his TV. The men are seen sneaking out by Grace, who agrees to keep their secret.

Using the information from the wiretap, the group conducts several successful raids on Cohen operations. After a particularly violent raid on a Cohen drug shipment, Keeler begins to question what they are doing but is re-assured by John. The media begins referring to the men as "The Gangster Squad", and Cohen pushes his men to find out who they are. Keeler deduces that Cohen is building a large wire gambling business somewhere in town, and warns Ardi that if they don't take it out before it becomes operational Cohen will become too big for even them to stop. Keeler uses wire transmissions to locate the building, and the squad wipes it out. An enraged Cohen realizes that the Gangster Squad must be honest cops when he discovers that none of his money was stolen.

Cohen suspects that his house is bugged and begins searching for the tap. Grace overhears Cohen and fears that he knows about her relationship with Wooters. With the help of a maid, Grace escapes Cohen's house and meets Wooters, who takes her to Whalen and tasks him with getting her out of town. Cohen finds the bug and begins feeding false information to Keeler. Cohen lures the Gangster Squad into a trap in Chinatown, but Wooters arrives in time to alert the men to the trap. While the men are distracted in Chinatown, Cohen hits several targets himself. Cohen's bodyguard Karl Lockwood finds Keeler's listening post and kills him while Cohen, Johnny Stomp, and Neddy Herbert go to Whalen's looking for Grace. Cohen murders Whalen in front of Grace, who hides from him. John's house is hit by a drive-by shooting, the stress of which causes Connie to give birth to their son in their bathtub.

Grace says she will testify against Cohen for the murder of Whalen, as that is the only way they'll be able to get Cohen. John uses Grace's testimony and asks Judge Carter, a corrupt judge to sign it, threatening to reveal Cohen providing him with prostitutes in exchange for the judge watching over Cohen's gang. As soon as the squad leaves, Judge Carter calls Cohen's hotel, warning the gang that the squad is coming to arrest Cohen for murder. The squad arrives at Cohen's hotel to arrest Cohen and an intense firefight breaks out, killing Herbert in the process. Wooters and Kennard are wounded, while Cohen and Lockwood escape. John pursues them down the block, assisted by a mortally wounded Kennard and his sharpshooting skill. Kennard, with the help of Ramirez, shoots Lockwood just before he dies and John and Cohen engage in a brutal fistfight with Cohen skillfully beating John to the punch until it eventually ends with John gaining the upper hand and beating Cohen to his knees. As a crowd gathers, a bloodied John walks away and Cohen is arrested for Whalen's murder.

As Chief Parker had told them, the Gangster Squad is never credited in taking down Cohen. Grace's testimony ensures Cohen is sentenced to 25 to life at Alcatraz, where he is welcomed violently by Whalen's friends. Grace and Wooters stay together and he stays on the force, while Ramirez and Harris become partners on the beat. Ramirez is shown patrolling with Kennard's signature Colt Single Action Army on his hip. John quits to live a quiet life in Los Angeles with Connie and their son.

Cast

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Production

Filming

Principal photography began on September 6, 2011 in Los Angeles. Sets were located all over L.A. County from north of the San Fernando Valley to south of the county border. Sets were also recreated in Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City.[8] The Los Angeles Union Station, the Tower Theater, the Los Angeles City Hall, Highland Park Police Station, Park Plaza Hotel, MacArthur Park and Clifton's Cafeteria were used as filming locations. Three days of production were spent in Chinatown, Los Angeles. The film was shot digitally using cameras with anamorphic lenses.[9] Filming wrapped on December 15, 2011.[10]

Re-shoots

The first trailer for Gangster Squad was released on May 9, 2012.[11] In the wake of the mass shooting at a theater in Aurora, Colorado on July 20, the trailer was pulled from most theaters running before films and airing on television, and removed from Apple's trailer site and YouTube due to a scene in which characters shoot submachine guns at moviegoers through the screen of Grauman's Chinese Theatre.[12][13]

It was later reported that the theater scene from the film would be either removed, or placed in a different setting since it is a crucial part of the film, and the film would undergo additional re-shoots of several scenes to accommodate these changes. This resulted in the release of Gangster Squad being delayed.[5] About a week after the shootings in Aurora, Warner officially confirmed that the film would be released on January 11, 2013, bumped from the original September 7, 2012 release date.[6][14][15][16] Two weeks later, on August 22, the cast reunited in Los Angeles to completely re-shoot the main action sequence of the film. The new scene was set in Chinatown where the Gangster Squad comes into open conflict with the gangsters as they strike back. Josh Brolin said he was not sad the original 'movie theatre' scene was cut, and admitted that this new version is just as violent.[citation needed]

Release

Box office

Gangster Squad grossed $46 million in North America and $59.2 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $105.2 million, against a budget of $60 million.[4]

The film grossed $17 million in its opening weekend, finishing third at the box office behind Zero Dark Thirty ($24.4 million) and A Haunted House ($18.1 million).

Critical reception

Gangster Squad received mixed reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a rating of 32%, based on 193 reviews, with an average rating of 5/10. The site's consensus reads, "Though it's stylish and features a talented cast, Gangster Squad suffers from lackluster writing, underdeveloped characters and an excessive amount of violence".[17] Another review aggregator, Metacritic, which assigns a rating based off top reviews from mainstream critics, calculated a score of 40 out of 100, based on 38 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[18] On CinemaScore, audiences gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[19]

Mark Kermode on his BBC Radio 5 Live show with Simon Mayo, compared Gangster Squad unfavourably with the Rockstar video game L.A Noire which he thought had better character development than Gangster Squad.

The reviewers of Spill.com gave it a "Rental," praising the stylish approach but criticizing the dialogue, Emma Stone's under-developed "damsel-in-distress" character, and Sean Penn's laughable makeup. Cyrus suggests that the romantic subplot between Sergeant Jerry Wooters and Grace Faraday is "a story you would care nothing about if it wasn't Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone".[20] IGN editor Chris Tilly wrote "Gangster Squad looks great but frustrates because with the talent involved, it had the potential to be so much more, " thus rating the film 6.3 out of 10.[21]

Writing for Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times, Jeff Shannon gives the film 2 stars out of 4. He believes that director Fleischer, better known for his comedic work, is out of his element, and barely suppressing his urge to spoof the genre. He notes that Stone and Gosling had chemistry in Crazy, Stupid, Love but that here it "curdles into lukewarm mush". He further criticizes the stock characters, and the generally uneven tone of the film, but praises the action highlights such as the car chase, and occasional flashes of brilliance in the performance of Sean Penn. In conclusion he describes Christian Slater's 1991 film Mobsters as still a marginally better film than Gangster Squad.[22]

Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave the movie a "C" and wrote,

When Penn is on screen, Gangster Squad is far from great, but it does crackle with a certain gutter fascination. The trouble is that the director, Ruben Fleischer (the music-video veteran who made Zombieland), lures us into wanting to see a thriller that runs on intrigue, but Ardi and his team of cops never come up with a devious or even very coherent plan. They beat the hell out of folks, bomb storefronts, and race through the boulevards in their cool '40s cars. And the movie, as criminal drama, goes nowhere.[23]

Richard Roeper gave the film a B+, saying “Gangster Squad is a highly stylized, pulp-fiction period piece based on true events” and noted the strong performances.

Home media

Gangster Squad was released on DVD and Blu-ray on April 23, 2013. The Blu-ray includes director's commentary from Ruben Fleischer and several segments about the real life men and stories of the Gangster Squad and Mickey Cohen.[24]

Depictions of reality

The film is inspired by the real-life Gangster Squad of the LAPD, although much of the film is fabricated.

  • The film portrays Cohen organizing the murder of opponent Jack Dragna, whereas in reality Dragna died of a heart attack in 1956.
  • William Parker is portrayed as a no-nonsense Christian in the film, whereas in reality he was far more controversial. Parker was also only 45 years old in 1949, and not in his 70s like Nolte (Parker didn't live to become 70; he died at age 61).
  • Parker was not the one who created the Gangster Squad. The Squad was created by Chief Clemence B. Horrall in 1946.
  • The film concludes with Cohen being arrested in 1949 for murder and sent to Alcatraz. In reality, he was imprisoned in 1951 and again in 1961 for tax evasion. He was, however, attacked with a lead pipe while in prison as mentioned.
  • Slapsy Maxie's, a nightclub prominently featured in the story, was a real establishment owned by "Slapsy" Maxie Rosenbloom, a former light-heavyweight boxing champion.
  • While it is possible Cohen murdered Jack Whalen in real life, it was not at Whalen's home as depicted in the film. Whalen was shot in 1959 while at dinner with Cohen and three of his associates, although Cohen was not accused or convicted of the murder himself.
  • Cohen's bodyguard Johnny Stompanato was not shot like depicted in the film, but instead lived until 1958, when he was stabbed by Cheryl Crane, the daughter of his girlfriend, Lana Turner.
  • The real life Max Kennard was killed in a 1952 car crash after he had retired, and not shot in the line of duty like in the film.
  • In the film, Conwell Keeler is the first member of the Squad to be killed. In real life, he outlived all other members of the Gangster Squad, dying of a stroke in 2012.
  • John O'Mara enjoyed retirement alongside his wife Connie and their daughter (unlike the son they have in the film) until O'Mara's death in 2003 at the age of 86.

References

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External links