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Crime Does Pay

One of the most popular staples in film is ‘crime’– films about cops, robbers, gangsters, obsessed detectives and lowlifes. The genre has fans for a reason: it has the potential to be exciting and entertaining, usually includes great characters, cool scripts and in the best cases these films have unpredictable endings and give us a cathartic glimpse into the seedier side of life...

One lost crime comedy gem is Thunderbolt and Lightfoot (1974), a rip-snorter of a film made by infamous director Michael Cimino, pre-The Deerhunter (1978) Heaven’s Gate (1980). It stars two of the biggest actors of the time – Clint Eastwood as veteran bank robber John “Thunderbolt” Doherty, and Geoff Bridges as itinerant car thief “Lightfoot”, a kid out for kicks in the permissive 70s. On the run from a gang and careering around in a very cool muscle car, it’s a terrific screwball comedy that’s often overlooked.

Heat (1995) is at the opposite end of the spectrum – a big fat crime drama by one of contemporary drama’s best directors, Michael Mann (Ali). The acting is great, so is the casting and story: plus two of America’s acting giants share a scene together for the first time – last names only here: De Niro and Pacino. De Niro plays a crim at the top end of town, with a career in big moneyed high-tech heists. He’s had enough and wants to leave his hometown LA... Pacino is an old dog in the police force – and the detective assigned to bringing down De Niro and his elusive crew. With a great chase scene at LAX this ‘less is more’ drama has the personal lives of the characters intertwine with the thrilling crime at hand. A great character study and an ‘honour amongst thieves’ movie that stands the test of time...

Any credible crime movie list has to include Goodfellas (1990), Martin Scorsese’s thrilling interpretation of the real-life rise and fall of career crim Henry Hill. De Niro doesn’t say a helluva lot in this but he’s menacing all the same; Joe Pesci says way too much and scares also, but the movie really belongs to Ray Liotta playing Hill, the Irish lad who gets ‘made’, becomes addicted to the good life (and narcotics), then turns informant. Lavish, ambitious, stylish and the real deal – you can’t go past Goodfellas for sheer muscular flair.

Across the Atlantic to Old Blighty – three crime movies stand out immediately: The Long Good Friday (1980), the original Get Carter (1971) and more recent entry, Sexy Beast (2000). All three feature great performances by key lead actors. The Long Good Friday has Bob Hoskins in a career-defining performance as a veteran gangster who plans a big score only to discover someone’s trying to knock him off. Michael Caine plays one of the hardest men ever to menace the screen in Get Carter, a gangster on a mission to avenge his brother’s murder, and Ray Winstone and Ben Kinglsey take great joy playing against type in Sexy Beast, facing off explosively. Winstone is a crim trying to get out of the game by retiring in sunny Spain while Kingsley is a gangster sent to retrieve him. Ghandi gets nasty...

And as for Australia – one film genre we have always done consistently well in is crime - movies about crims, outlaws and menacing types. Starting in the silent era with The Story Of The Kelly Gang (1915 – incidentally the world’s first ever feature-length movie), right up to The Boys (1998), Chopper (2000), Mad Dog Morgan (1976), Last Train To Freo (2006) and one of the best pieces of ‘motion picture television’ ever made in Australia, Blue Murder (1995). What a great benchmark in Australian crime film and TV.

- Megan

Megan Spencer has spent way too much of her life in the dark, all for a good cause though - watching movies as a professional film critic. For the last six and a half years she has been serving the ever-increasing hunger for film and DVD reviews as radio triple j's resident film critic, and a year ago joined the new line up of long-running SBS-TV film review program, The Movie Show.

Every now and then she pops up into the light to make her own films, documentaries (her latest is 'Fantastic Brutality', a documentary about an obsessed wrestling fan, to be released next year). She has also written about film for many publications including J-Mag, Limelight, Inside Film Magazine and the Age Green Guide.

And the impossible question to ask a film critic: what's her favourite film? "Blue Velvet would be at the top of the list, so would Fight Club... But then again American In Paris makes me cry every time."

Megan has also been part of the Foxtel's Project Greenlight Australia as an on-air panelist and judge.

Ten crime films on DVD

Chopper
Chopper (R18+)  2000
Saving
Chopper (ERIC BANA) is Mark "Chopper" Read, real-life convict and best-selling author of How to Shoot Friends and Influence People. His story is frightening, savagely funny and twisted. The son of a devoutly religious mother and a one-time soldier with a fondness for sleeping alongside a loaded gun,...   more
View trailer
Get Carter
Get Carter (MA15+)  2000
Saving
Sylvester Stallone is Jack Carter - a hardened Las Vegas loan shark collector. Carter has spent his life collecting for other people - debts, agendas, retribution. He stands alone and always stands apart. But when his brother is killed in an accident, it takes Carter home to Seattle...to the family ...   more
View trailer
GoodFellas
GoodFellas (R18+)  1990
Saving
When Martin Scorcese, one of the world's most skillful and respected directors, reunited with two-time Oscar-winner Robert De Niro in GoodFellas, the result was one of the most powerful films of the year. Based on the true-life best seller Wiseguy by Nicholas Pileggi and backed by a dynamic pop/rock...   more
View trailer
Heat
Heat (MA15+)  1995
Saving
When Al Pacino and Robert De Niro square off, Heat sizzles. Written and directed by Michael Mann, Heat includes dazzling set pieces and a bank heist that USA Today calls "the greatest action scene of recent times." It also offers "the most impressive collection of actors in one movie this year" (New...   more
View trailer
Long Good Friday, The
Long Good Friday, The (R18+)  1980
Saving
London - Good Friday. The Long Good Friday. Harold Shand... undisputed king of London's underworld is setting up the biggest business deal of his career. But, someone is out to stop him. What should have been the greatest day in Harold's life suddenly becomes the longest. Suddenly he's fighting for...   more
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Mad Dog Morgan
Mad Dog Morgan (M)  1976
Saving
Dennis Hopper plays 'Mad Dog' Morgan - an outlaw who is wanted at any price, dead or alive. Mad Dog is set against the tumultuous Gold Rush era of Australian history. A melting pot of racial, social and economic tensions, Australia in the 1850s and 1860s was experiencing the harsh transition from a ...   more
Ocean's Eleven
Ocean's Eleven (M)  2001
Saving
Hollywood's A list stars come together to pull off the most daring heist Las Vegas has ever known… It will take brilliant planning, shrewd scheming, cunning disguises, truckloads of technology and just a little bit of luck. But how do you fleece one of the most ruthless casino operators in town…. An...   more
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White Heat
White Heat (PG)  1949
Saving
As a psychotic thug devoted to his hard-boiled ma, James Cagney - older, scarier and just as electrifying - gives a performance to match his work in The Public Enemy as White Heat's cold-blooded Cody Jarrett. Bracingly directed by Raoul Walsh, this fast-paced thriller tracin...   more

Megan's previous editorials...

  • Crime Does Pay December, 2007
  • New Musical Express December, 2007
  • Terrifying Classics at Quickflix November, 2007
  • David Lynch: When Dreams Go Bad November, 2007
  • Celebrities Go Real October, 2007
  • Wrestlers go Hollywood October, 2007
  • Best of (New) British on DVD September, 2007
  • Manufacturing Michael Moore September, 2007
  • Quirky Canadians August, 2007
  • Screen Magic & Wizards On Quickflix August, 2007
  • Italian “Revelations” in Perth July, 2007
  • White Icy Movies July, 2007
  • Rebels with (and without) a cause: 'outsiders' on DVD June, 2007
  • The Serious Business of Comedy: the film Charlie Kaufman June, 2007
  • The Cool Mums of Them All May, 2007
  • It’s the Footy Season… Now also on DVD May, 2007
  • Sweet Tooth Movies on DVD April, 2007
  • Vacation Movies on DVD April, 2007
  • The French are coming to DVD March, 2007
  • Take me back to High School March, 2007
  • Oscar Mania February, 2007
  • Summer Movies on DVD February, 2007
  • New Year's Eve movies on DVD January, 2007
  • Political Documentation on DVD January, 2007
  • Christmas Films On DVD December, 2006
  • AFI Films for 2006 December, 2006
  • Horse Movies on DVD November, 2006
  • Dads On DVD September, 2006
  • Pirates on DVD August, 2006
  • Breakfast At Tiffany's Anniversary Edition June, 2006
  • Road Movies on DVD May, 2006
  • Queer film classics April, 2006
  • Monster mums February, 2006
  • Comedians on film on DVD January, 2006
  • Rock docs January, 2006
  • Animated films December, 2005
  • Comic Book Movies November, 2005
  • Drug Movies Lined Up October, 2005

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