Hoodlum Release Date: 1997
Ebert Rating: *** By Roger
Ebert Aug 27, 1997
The
business of crime is as much business as crime, as Martin Scorsese demonstrated
in ``Casino'' by centering his story on a gangster who was essentially an
accountant and oddsmaker. Now Bill Duke's ``Hoodlum'' looks into the way the
Mafia muscled into the black-run numbers racket in Harlem in the 1930s; this is
a ``gangster movie'' in a sense, but it is also about free enterprise, and
about how, as the hero says when asked why he didn't go into medicine or law,
``I'm a colored man and white folks left me crime.'' Of course that is not
quite the whole story, but by the time Bumpy Johnson (Laurence Fishburne) says
it, it's true of him: He's a smart ex-con, returned to the streets of Harlem
during its pre-war renaissance, when music, arts and commerce flourished along
with the numbers game. He hooks up with old friends, including Illinois Gordon
(Chi McBride), who masks his feelings with jokes and introduces him to a social
worker Francine Hughes (Vanessa L. Williams).
Francine sees the good in Bumpy, and encourages him to make something of
himself, but Bumpy defends his career choice: ``The numbers provide jobs for
over 2,000 colored folks right here in Harlem alone. It's the only home-grown
business we got.'' The game is run by Stephanie St. Clair (Cicely Tyson), known
as the Queen of Numbers. She's from the islands, elegant, competitive. She
takes on Bumpy as her lieutenant. The mob has up until now let Harlem run its
own rackets, but Dutch Schultz (Tim Roth) moves in, trying to take over the
numbers. His nominal boss is the powerful Lucky Luciano (Andy Garcia), who
disapproves of Schultz because of the way he dresses (``You got mustard on your
suit''), and is inclined to stand back and see what happens. He doesn't mind if
Schultz takes over Harlem, but is prepared to do business with the Queen and
Bumpy if that's the way things work out.
One thing that has kept the Mafia from attaining more power in the United
States is that it has a tendency to murder its most ambitious members; the guys
who keep a low profile may survive, but are not leadership material. Imagine a
modern corporation run along the same lines. Bumpy is the far-sighted
strategist who sees that it's better to talk than fight; Dutch is the thug who
itches to start shooting.
This is Bill Duke's second period film set in Harlem, after ``A Rage in
Harlem'' (1991). He likes the clothes, the cars, the intrigue. (In both films,
interestingly, he didn't film in Harlem, finding better period locations in
Cincinnati for ``Rage'' and Chicago for ``Hoodlum.'') He builds up to some
effective set-pieces, including a massacre that interrupts a trip to the opera;
in the payoff, Bumpy and the Queen listen to an aria while he has blood on his
shirt.
The film's argument is that the policy racket, like
many legitimate home-grown black businesses, was appropriated by whites when it
became too powerful. The streets of inner-city America are lined with shuttered
storefronts while their former customers line up at Wal-Mart. And, yes, there
is an element of racism involved: When I was growing up in Champaign-Urbana in
the 1940s and 1950s, the richest black man in town was said to be the local
numbers czar. Whites had no problem with the numbers (some played), but they
couldn't stop talking about how a black man could make all that money.
Duke and his screenwriter, Chris Brancato, don't make ``Hoodlum''
into a violent action film, though it has its bloody shoot-outs, but into more
of a character study. Schultz is painted as a crude braggart, Lucky Luciano is
suave and insightful, and the most intriguing figure among the white characters
is crime fighter Thomas Dewey, who ran for president in 1948 as a reformer, but
is portrayed here, in scenes sure to be questioned in many quarters, as a
corrupt grafter. (Schultz observes that he is paying off Dewey at the same time
the famed prosecutor is getting headlines for trying to put him in jail.) Bumpy
Johnson is played by Fishburne as someone who could have had a legit career,
and he's torn when Francine, the social worker, cools toward him because of his
occupation. Illinois Gordon, his best friend, also asks hard and idealistic
questions, especially after a funeral. By creating these two characters, the screenplay
gives Bumpy somewhere to turn and someone to talk to, so he isn't limited to
action scenes. As Stephanie St. Clair, Cicely Tyson models her character on
real women of the period, who were tough, independent, and used men without
caving in to them.
``Hoodlum'' is being marketed as a violent action picture, and in a sense, it
is. But Duke has made a historical drama as much as a thriller, and his
characters reflect a time when Harlem seemed poised on the brink of better
things, and the despair of the postwar years was not easily seen on its
prosperous streets. Was the policy game all that
bad? Sure, the odds were stiff, but a couple of times a week, someone had to
win. These days, it's called the lottery.
Cast & Credits
Bumpy
Johnson: Laurence Fishburne
Lucky Luciano: Andy Garcia
Dutch Schultz: Tim Roth
Francine Hughes: Vanessa L. Williams
Stephanie St. Clair: Cicely Tyson
Bub Hewlett: Clarence Williams III
Illinois Gordon: Chi McBride
(Extra: Nathan Thompson)
Directed By Bill Duke . Written By Chris Brancato . Running Time: 142 Minutes.
Rated R (For Graphic Violence, Strong Language, And Some Sexuality And Nudity).
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2005, rogerebert.com