Stylish, very violent gangster film set in 1920s Chicago about a federal agent determined to bring down infamous gang boss Al Capone.
Certificate
Duration115 mins
Review by
It's a moment of quick, brutal improvisation, and it has an energy that's lacking during most of "The Untouchables." Here is a movie about an era when law enforcement resembled gang warfare, but the movie seems more interested in the era than in the war. "The Untouchables" has great costumes, great sets, great cars, great guns, great locations and a few shots that absolutely capture the Prohibition Era,which are more boxes ticked than unticked but it does not have a great script, great performances or great direction.
The script by David Mamet, a “Prize-winning” playwright, but it could have been by anybody. It doesn't have the Mamet touch, the conversational rhythms that carry a meaning beyond words. It also lacks any particular point of view about the material and, in fact, lacks the dynamic tension of many gangster movies written by less talented writers. Everything seems cut and dried, twice-told, preordained.
Many people will be into this type of film,just not this person.