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2020 Movies

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Judd Apatow’s new film, The King of Staten Island, premiered today On-Demand with Pete Davidson leading a cast that also includes Marisa Tomei, Bill Burr, and Steve Buscemi. Davidson, who also co-wrote the movie with Apatow and Dave Sirus, stars as 24-year-old deadbeat Scott Carlin, who has dealt with depression, among other issues, since his father (who was a firefighter) died in a fire when Scott was a child. This movie is also semi-autobiographical and is loosely based on Pete Davidson’s experiences, having grown up on Staten Island and losing his real dad, Scott, on 9/11 . If you’re familiar with any of Davidson’s comedy or appearances over the years, you’d know he talks pretty openly about his father’s death, which much like in the movie, involves a dark sense of humor as his way to cope. It’s also interesting that as much as Davidson has shit on Staten Island in the past, it’s clear after watching this movie that he appreciates the lessons he learned by being from there. It’s where he grew up, where his family is from, it’ll always be apart of him, and this movie was, in a strange way, a love letter to his hometown.

From the get-go, it’s obvious that Scott is a total piece of shit. He pretty much just smokes weed and hangs out at his friend’s house all day, which sounds cool until you realize none of them seem to have jobs. I’m not a parent, but if I were, there’s no way in hell I’d let my 24-year-old son do nothing all day and live rent-free. So as much as Scott is to blame for his lack of ambition, his mom, Margie (Marisa Tomei) is equally responsible.

Scott makes two exceptionally bad choices over the course of the movie. The first is when he thinks it’s a great idea to give a random 9 year old boy a tattoo. Let me set the scene. Scott, an aspiring tattoo artist, is with his three best friends at the beach giving tattoos when a little kid walks up to them and says he wants one. A sane person would know it’s not right to permanently ink up a third-grader, but since it seems like he doesn’t have a great track record of making solid decisions in the past, Scott figures he needs the practice and begins to tatt. As idiotic as that kid was, after just a few seconds he gets scared and runs away with just a two-inch-long black line on the exterior of his arm, so at least he had some sense.

Next thing we know, the kid’s dad, Ray (Bill Burr), is on Scott’s front porch shouting at Margie and demanding that she pay to have the tattoo removed from his son’s arm. My biggest question this entire scene was “how the hell did he find out where Scott lives?” Luckily, Margie thought the same thing as me, but when she asks him how he found their house he said “I have my ways”. Look, unless he was Ethan Hunt in disguise, how the hell would he be able to track down some random guy from the beach (that he never saw) on all of Staten Island? However, once cooler heads prevailed, Ray comes back to the house and asks Margie out for a cup of coffee, to which she accepts. Thus sparked a magnificent love that she had been longing for since her husband’s passing, letting Scott off the hook for an otherwise terrible decision.

Scott’s other bad (worse) choice is involving himself in a robbery with his three best friends that I mentioned earlier. Remember, none of them seem to have jobs aside from selling drugs, so what is their bright idea? Rob a pharmacy of course! Luckily, Scott thinks it’s stupid to rob a pharmacy too, so his friends just make him the lookout. Only, he’s the world’s worst lookout. While his friends are in the store committing a very serious crime, Scott, who suffers from depression and anxiety, is outside playing games on his phone. Simultaneously, the owners of the pharmacy show up and shoot, but don’t kill one of the guys, and a few seconds later the cops show up and arrest his other two friends. Luckily Scott gets away and his friends don’t rat him out, but as a viewer, it’s still hard for me to believe that in that tense of a situation he would be on his phone playing games.

What’s confusing about the robbery in terms of the film’s plot, is that it didn’t even serve as Scott’s wakeup call to get his act together. I’d like to think that watching his three best friends go to jail would’ve whipped him into shape, but it took getting in a fight with Ray and his mother kicking him out of the house for him to finally get it together. And that’s really where the story starts…which is interesting because that happened nearly 3/4 of the way through the movie.

As funny and charming as The King of Staten Island was, I do feel like it dragged a bit in the middle. We understood that Scott was a loser, but we were waiting for him to turn the corner, and it felt like we had to wait about 25 minutes too long for that to happen. As cute as Ray’s kids were, did we really need all the scenes with Scott walking them to school? Or the whole trip to his sister’s college? It’s not like he ended up enrolling at the school, so what was the point of showing us that he got along so well with all of the college kids? Maybe they intended the ending to be ambiguous, but I want to know what Scott is going to do with his life!

Will he be a firefighter? Well, he’s super scrawny and has A.D.D. so the studying and physical part of that job will be a challenge, so I’m going to cross that off the list.

Will he go to college? He didn’t graduate high school and seems uninterested with continuing his education on account of the A.D.D. (mentioned earlier), so that’s probably a no too.

Will he become a tattoo artist? This is what I don’t understand about the entire “tattoo artist” storyline. The whole movie, all we see are the shitty tattoos he does on his friends and his mom, leading us to believe that he’s not good, and it’s a far-fetched dream. But later in the movie, he draws an utterly flawless picture of Ice Flash, which then leads us to believe that he’s really good and that the tattoo artist dream might be conceivable? But THEN Ray lets him tattoo all over his back, and most of them are terrible, bringing me back to the thought that he could never be a tattoo artist.

Regardless, I think that Pete Davidson’s performance has officially established him as more than just a sketch-show and stand-up comedian. I was hesitant about him carrying a movie, being that he had never done it before and I never considered him a fantastic actor, but I think his relation to the character carried his performance and made it more authentic…plus it didn’t hurt to have Bill Burr, Steve Buscemi, and Marisa Tomei as costars. In all honesty, I don’t think the movie works without Burr. The energy he brought to the role is exactly what was needed, especially during the argumentative scenes.

At the end of the movie, I was clearly optimistic about his future with Kelsey (Bel Powley), but I still have no idea how he’s going to make money. There’s nothing wrong with being the custodian of the fire department, but don’t they want us to believe he’s meant for bigger and better things? I would like to think so.

Rating: 7.2/10

Last November, I wrote about The Way Back just after the trailer had been released. I was stoked to see this movie for several reasons, the main being that Ben Affleck would be portraying a character he could personally relate to – a recovering alcoholic. Sadly, the coronavirus pandemic happened and movie theaters all across the country were forced to close; not ideal for a March 6th premiere. However, just because it lost money at the box office and could be considered a commercial failure, The Way Back is a damn good movie.

In my trailer review, I said I thought the movie would be “Coach Carter meets Crazy Heart“. I was pretty spot on with that comparison, but to my surprise, it is much more about Jack Cunningham’s (Ben Affleck) internal struggle with alcoholism than it is about basketball. In fact, I don’t even think you could call this a “basketball movie” in the purest sense if the points of comparison are movies like Coach Carter, Above the Rim, and/or White Men Can’t Jump. In those movies, basketball is the central theme around which there would be no story if you removed it (just look at the titles). It’s like calling Straight Outta Compton a musical. While there are certainly musical elements in Straight Outta Compton, it’s safe to say that it’s no La La Land. In The Way Back, we don’t even see a basketball until around fifteen minutes into the film. Basketball serves more as a crutch for Cunningham, who has spent the last few years as a raging alcoholic following the death of his 9-year-old son. Don’t get me wrong, coaching the basketball team was instrumental in his road to recovery, but I always felt that it was playing second fiddle to the other issues at hand.

Regardless, Affleck was fantastic in this role, and it’s a shame this movie was essentially forgotten about because of when it was released. I’d even go so far as to say that this was one of the best roles of his career. I have to believe that his personal afflictions with alcohol led to him delivering such a powerful performance because he identified with the character like not many other actors could.

As great as Affleck was in this role, the writers deserve a ton of credit for the layout of this movie. Jack Cunningham’s character was like an onion that kept getting peeled back one layer at a time. At first, we have no idea why he’s a drunk. All I know is that if you have to bring a cooler full of beer to work every day, you’ve been through some shit. First layer – we find out that he’s been separated from his wife for a while, but they are not divorced and things seem pretty amicable between the two of them. Sure, that’s a shitty situation, but not drinking-yourself-under-the-table-every-night kind of shitty. There’s gotta be more to his story. Second layer – his son died of cancer at the age of 9. Okay, yup, makes sense. There isn’t anything worse in this world for a parent than losing a child, but watching your young son slowly die via brain tumors would be enough to drive any sane person off the edge, nonetheless someone with his background. Third layer – he had a shitty father. One night on their drive home, Brandon (Brandon Wilson) asks Coach why he turned down a full ride to Kansas out of high school. Cunningham goes on to tell us that his father pretty much only liked him because he was good at basketball, so to really stick it to his old man, he just quit. As if foregoing a college scholarship and a potential NBA career wasn’t enough, he wound up getting into drugs, among other substances as well to really piss off his dad. That right there, ladies and gents, is the trifecta of future substance abuse. No way someone goes through all that and comes out a normal person on the other side…you’ve got to be one mentally tough son of a bitch.

Another aspect of the movie that didn’t go unnoticed for a stickler like me was that it actually looked like the actors had played basketball before. One of my biggest pet peeves is when movies cast someone who has clearly never played sports in their life. It takes away from the ambiance of a scene when someone has terrible shooting or throwing mechanics, so the fact that the basketball scenes in this movie were believable was huge. And since I’m talking about believable roles, I’d be doing you a disservice if I didn’t remind you about Ben Affleck’s huge back tattoo – one of many questionable choices he’s made in his personal life. Love your movies though, Ben!