Hey Yo...
I've already spoken about two of my favorite villains in cinematic history (Stansfield (Gary Oldman) and Tybalt (John Leguizamo)) so today I'll be writing about not one but three of my favorite bad guys of all time, all from the brilliant True Romance. Step forward Drexl Spivey, Don Vincenzo Coccotti and Virgil (played by uber talented actors Gary Oldman (again), Christoher Walken and James Gandolfini).
True Romance was written by Quentin Tarantino who famously had to sell the script for the minimum amount allowed and directed by Tony Scott. Typical of Tarantino, TR is a pop cutural movie with an incredible ensemble: Christian Slater, Patricia Arquette, Dennis Hopper, Michael Rappaport, Chris Penn, Tom Sizemore, Samuel L. Jackson, Brad Pitt, Bronson Pinchot, Val Kilmer and Oldman, Walken and Gandolfini (oh and Jack Black is in a deleted scene). It tells the tale of a comic book store worker, Clarence (Slater) who falls for an escort Alabama (Arquette). They get into some trouble when they encounter Alabama's former pimp, Drexl. They end up with a suitcase full of cocaine which they spend the rest of the movie trying to sell - not before making enemies with the rightful owner of the narcotics, Blue Lou Boyle.
Drexl Spivey is a white guy who thinks he's black. He's a pimp and he's not an altogether nice guy. We get a great fight scene between Clarence and Drexl and his cronies. "We got ourselves a motherfucking Chares Bronson!" While Oldman is not in the movie for very long, he certainly left a lasting impression. Oldman said in the past he'd like to make a movie about Drexl - I'd love for this to come true but perhaps the opportunity is gone.
Clarence and Alabama then go on the run leaving Vincenzo Coccotti, a gangster in service to Blue Lou Boyle, to interrogate Clarence's father Cliff (Dennis Hopper at the top of his game). The scene between Walken and Hopper (known as the Sicilian Scene) has gone down in cinematic history as one of the best and Tarantino himself ahs said it's one of his proudest moments.
Another adversary Alabama comes into contact with is the sadistic Virgil with a pre-Tony James Gandolfini getting violent. Virgil gives a memorable monologue about killing: " Now the first time you kill someone, that's the hardest... now I do it just to watch their fuckin' expression change." Credit must also be given to Patricia Arquette, who plays off Gandolfini beautifully and her character is very believable in the defiance she shows.
The movie ends in a hail of bullets and feathers in a hotel. True Romance is one of my favorite movies; it has brilliant dialogue, great acting from some legendary actors (and also some memorable turns from lesser stars- Bronson Pinchot excells in a comic role), an excellent score from Hans Zimmer, it is asthetically pleasing and has very well choreographed action scenes. A much watch movie - over and over again.
10 lying Sicilians out of 10.
El Chico Clandestino