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The Killing of a Chinese Bookie By Jeff Shannon
Anyone expecting The Killing of a Chinese Bookie to be an
action-packed film about a gangland murder is going to be sorely
disappointed--the title is the only commercial element in this fascinating
character study by writer-director John Cassavetes, who once again finds
his cinematic soulmate in actor Ben Gazzara. Doing for sleazy Hollywood
strip-joints and underworld bullies what Martin Scorsese's Mean Streets
did for the denizens of New York's Little Italy, the film uses verité
technique to tell the story of Cosmo Vitelli (Gazzara), a strip-club owner
whose growing debt to a local gangster (the chilling Morgan Woodward) can
only be erased if he agrees to kill a rival Chinese gangster. Reluctantly,
Cosmo carries out the job with startling efficiency.
As usual, Cassavetes employs his favorite actors (including Seymour
Cassel and the fearsome Timothy Carey) and vivid improvisation to give Chinese
Bookie a tense atmosphere of emotional urgency--the film's tone is one
of keen desperation, as if we've been invited to witness Cosmo's dark
night of the soul. Anyone who's unfamiliar with Cassavetes's style may
find this film grating and impenetrable, but those in tune with the
director's defiant independence will surely appreciate his emphasis on
character, psychology, and revealing flashes of human behavior, captured
on film as only Cassavetes could capture them. Watching this film, you can
readily understand why Cassavetes has had such a steady influence on
Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino, Paul Thomas Anderson, and a host of
like-minded independent filmmakers.
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