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Miller's Crossing (1990)
In the Coen Brothers' twisty and complex gangster-crime
drama (their third feature) set in the Prohibition Era that paid
homage to hard-boiled 40s gangster films:
- at the close of the title credits - a fedora hat
floated through a wooded forest propelled by breezes and gusts of wind
(the object identified Italian consigliere
Tom Reagan's character-defining item of clothing)
- in the opening scene (similar to the opening sequence
in The Godfather (1972)), Prohibition-era
Irish gangster-boss Leo O'Bannon (Albert Finney) held an office meeting
with Italian rival Giovanni 'Johnny Caspar' Casparro (Jon Polito),
accompanied by his second-in-command - the brutal and bisexual
Eddie Dane (J.E. Freeman); the two Italian mobsters were there
to inform O'Bannon that they were planning to eliminate two-bit "son
of a bitch" Jewish grifter-bookie Bernie Bernbaum (John Turturro)
for double-crossing them - he was accused of revealing Caspar's fixed
fights to other gamblers: ("Now if you can't trust a fix, what
can you trust?...We question character to determine who's chiseling
in on my fix. And that's how we know it's Bernie Bernbaum, the Shmatte
Kid. Because ethically, he's kind of shaky")
- O'Bannon responded negatively and affirmed that Bernie
shouldn't be touched: "Sorry, Caspar. Bernie pays me for protection" -
his defense of Bernie threatened a turf war [Note: Bernie
was the brother of Verna Bernbaum (Marcia Gay Harden) who had begun
a relationship with Leo, while she also carried on an affair with
Tom Reagan (Gabriel Byrne), O'Bannon's de facto consigliere
at the film's start]; the film's deadly love
triangle was between Verna, O'Bannon, and Reagan
- after O'Bannon refused to cooperate, Caspar displayed
his antagonism toward the Irish king-pin ("big-shot"):
"I'm not some guinea fresh off the boat you can kick. I'm too
big now. I'm sick of taking the strap from you. I'm sick of marching
in here to kiss your Irish ass! And I'm sick of the high-hat! You's
fancy-pants, all of youse"
The Film's Opening Office Meeting - Set During
the Prohibition Era
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Irish Gangster Boss Leo O'Bannon (Albert Finney)
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Italian Gangster Rival Boss Giovanni 'Johnny Caspar'
Casparro (Jon Polito)
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- after their departure, Tom offered advice to O'Bannon
to agree to Caspar's demands, but his words failed to be convincing:
("Think about what protecting Bernie gets us and what offending Caspar
loses us"); when Leo responded to Tom:
"You know I don't like to think," Tom answered him: "Well,
think about whether you should start"
- in an iconic, dialogue-less, 5-minute beautifully
choreographed sequence, there was an attempted
assassination shoot-out attempt on Leo O'Bannon's life; as he was
reclining in an upstairs bedroom while listening to a 78 rpm grammophone
record playing 'Danny Boy' (sung by Irish tenor Frank Patterson),
he sensed trouble (smoke in the floorboards from a downstairs
fire) as Tommy Gun-wielding assassins sent by Caspar approached;
he single-handedly killed a couple of men by leaping under the bed
and shooting at their legs; after grabbing a machine-gun and leaping
onto the roof and then onto the ground, he fired mercilessly at length
at one assassin in an upstairs window who violently and spastically
vibrated from the barrage of bullets (a "dance of
death"); finally, he killed the two remaining hit-men fleeing
in a black car when it crashed into a tree and caught fire
- mobster Tom Reagan was guided by TicTac (Al Mancini) about how to proceed
with the execution of the double-crossing bookie Bernie;
the killing of Bernie was designed to prove Tom's loyalty to Caspar
to whom he had switched allegiance (although he was still loyal to
Leo), Reagan was given specific instructions: ("Okay,
take him in the woods and whack him....That's right. The boss wants
you to do it. Make sure you're with the good guys. Now, you know
how to do this, right? You gotta remember to put one in his brain.
Your first shot puts him down, then you put one in his brain, and
he's dead, then we go home")
- during the faked execution scene, Reagan marched
bookie Bernie Bernbaum far into the woods at Miller's Crossing to
shoot him; Bernie began to beg and soon was pleading on his
knees - it was a remarkable monologue: ("Tommy, you can't do
this! You don't bump guys! You're not like those animals back there.
It's not right, Tom! They can't make us do this. It's a wrong situation.
They can't make us different people than we are. We're not muscle,
Tom. I- I-I never killed anybody. I used a little information for
a chisel, that's all. It's my nature, Tom! I- I-I can't help it,
somebody gives me an angle, I play it. I don't deserve to die for
that. Do you think I do? I'm-I'm-I'm just a grifter, Tom. I'm-I'm-I'm-I'm-I'm
an nobody! But I'll tell ya what, I never crossed a friend, Tom.
I never killed anybody, I never crossed a friend, nor you, I'll bet.
We're not like those animals! This is not us! Th-th-this is some
hop dream! It's a dream, Tommy! I'm praying to you! I can't die!
I can't die out here in the woods, like a dumb animal! In the woods,
LIKE A DUMB ANIMAL! Like, like a dumb animal! I can't, I can't, I
CAN'T DIE OUT HERE IN THE WOODS! like a dumb animal. I can't die!
I'm praying to you! Look in your heart! I'm praying to you! Look
in your heart! I'm praying to you! Look in your heart! I'm praying
to you! Look in your heart. I'm praying to you! Look in your heart.
I'm praying to you. Look in your heart, look in your heart! You can't
kill me, look in your heart")
Miller's Crossing - The Initial Execution:
Bernie's Pathetic Pleading - "Look in your heart!"
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- Reagan deliberately shot in a different direction and
freed Bernie, and told him to disappear forever: ("Shut
up! You're dead, get me?...Shut up! You have to disappear for good.
No one can see you. No one can know...Go somewhere no one knows you.
Anyone sees you, you really are dead. You're not my problem anymore")
- later in the film, a vengeful Reagan was again forced to deal with the
blackmailing Bernie - and this time there would be no second chances
as a result of Bernie's begging and pleading: ("Tommy! Look
in your heart. Look in your heart"); Tommy couldn't
forgive him again: ("What heart?") and he put a bullet
in Bernie's forehead
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End of Title Credits: Blowing Fedora Hat (Belonging
to Tom Reagan)
The Attempted Assassination Shoot-Out Attempt on O'Bannon's
Life (To the Tune of "Danny
Boy")
Instructions to Tom Reagan for the Execution of Bernie: "Take
him in the woods and whack him"
Ending: There Would No Second Chances For Bernie
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