Hell's Kitchen, New York. Terry Noonan returns home after a ten-year absence. He soon reconnects with Jackie, a childhood friend and member of the Irish mob, and rekindles his love affair with Jackie's sister Kathleen.
Sean Penn
Terry
Ed Harris
Frankie
Gary Oldman
Jackie
Robin Wright
Kathleen
John Turturro
Nick
Burgess Meredith
Finn
R. D. Call
Nicholson
Joe Viterelli
Borelli
John C. Reilly
Stevie
Deirdre O'Connell
Irene
Marco St. John
Cavello
Thomas G. Waites
Frankie's Man #1
Michael Cambridge
Frankie's Man #2
Michael Cumpsty
Frankie's Man #3
Mick Cunningham
Frankie's Man #4
Daniel O'Shea
Frankie's Man #5
Thomas F. Duffy
Frankie's Man #6
Jamie Tirelli
Alvarez
Sandra Beall
Stevie's Date
Vincent Guastaferro
Borelli's Man #1
Johnny Williams
Borelli's Man #2
John Roselius
Borelli's Man #3
Louis Eppolito
Borelli's Man #4
Mo Gaffney
Maureen
John MacKay
Raferty
John Ottavino
Raferty's Son
Tim Gallin
Bar Customer #1
Timothy Klein
Bar Customer #2
Jack Wallace
Matty's Bartender
Frank Girardeau
Bartender #1
Michael P. Moran
Bartender #2
Frank Coletta
Bartender #3
Paul-Felix Montez
Pool Hall Manager
Freddi Chandler
Waitress
Tommy Sullivan
Police Detective
Ben Fine
Hotel Doorman
Saasha Costello
Frankie's Child #1
Catherine Stewart
Frankie's Child #2
James Russo
DeMarco (uncredited)
Director
Phil Joanou
Screenplay
Dennis McIntyre
November 20, 2014
8
The Westies.
State of Grace is directed by Phil Joanou and written by Dennis McIntyre. It stars Sean Penn, Ed Harris, Gary Oldman, Robin Wright, John Turturo and John C. Reilly. Music is by Ennio Morricone and cinematography by Jordan Cronenweth.
Terry Noonan (Penn) returns to Hells Kitchen after a number of years away and finds his best pal, Jackie Flannery (Oldman), is a major player in the Irish/American mob being run by his elder brother, Frankie Flannery (Harris). With a love interest rekindled and a secret he dare not reveal, Terry is soon caught in a maelstrom of danger and tested loyalties.
It got lost in the slipstream of Goodfellas, but although it’s not in the same league as Scorsese’s critical darling, State of Grace is a splendid slice of neo-noir gangsterism. The plot is made up of standard genre tropes, divided loyalties, betrayals, kinship, revenge, rivalries, territorial machismo and etc, all of which of course comes laced with spitfire dialogue and sparky violence.
The strengths come with the performances of the lead cast members, the visual flourishes via Cronenweth and Joanou and Morricone’s classical score. Penn and Oldman are forces of nature, the former a ball of emotional turbulence, the latter a hopped up maniac with killer tendencies. Harris as the daddio main man is a moody and malevolent presence, as is Joe Viterelli as mafia boss man Borelli. Wright seems a little out of place in this material, Turturo isn’t used nearly enough, but Reilly scores well with a limited role and Burgess Meredith pops in for a superb cameo.
It doesn’t have originality on its side, but it’s a mightily strong film regardless, with the human drama drawing one in as the tech skills impress across the board. 8/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00