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Great Depression Face-Off

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  • PUBLIC ENEMIES

    DIRECTOR: Michael Mann

    CAST: Johnny Depp, Christian Bale, Marion Coutillard, Jason Clark, Billy Crudup

    WHEN the film is a biographical sketch, this is a problem most directors run up against: where to draw the line between the person and the persona. From a director like Michael Mann, pairing actors such as Depp (playing the charismatic bank robber John Dillinger) against Bale (cast as Special Agent Purvis), you expect to get more of the first. Surprisingly, Mann keeps his film focused mostly on the latter.

    In 1933, the fourth year of the Great Depression, the heat is on J Edgar Hoover (played by Crudup), then the Director of the Bureau of Investigations, to capture Dillinger, who has been robbing banks and breaking out of prisons with consistent frequency. Desperate to redeem himself, Hoover has brought in Purvis, who has just shot another famous bank robber of the time, Pretty Boy Floyd.

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    Hoover has declared, interestingly, “a war on crime”, and the Public Enemy No. 1 is Dillinger. The film largely deals with this hunt, where the Agents narrowly miss capturing Dillinger, and when they do, let him embarrassingly get away. There are plenty of shootouts, down alleys and hotel corridors, up dingy staircases and scared streets, and towards the end, in a thick wood.

    However, if you get little sense of what Dillinger is about, you wonder what Bale is doing in the scenario. Any one of the faceless Special Agents who are his flunkeys could have done the trick. Bale doesn’t get a chance to display any of the edginess, the shades of right and wrong that he brings to his characters. Depp is equally underused. This role should have been tailor-made for an actor who doles out charm at the lift of an eyebrow. However, even his relationship with Billie Frechette (Coutillard) seems forced, comprising awkward lovemaking and out-of-place conversation.

    ... contd.

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