Post Description
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True Confessions (1981)
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Review:
Ulu Grosbard"s True Confessions scripted by John Gregory Dunne and Joan Dideon from his novel of the same name is a masterful film,
one of the most under-rated movies of the nineteen-eighties.
It"s an exquisite character study, whose themes deal with corruption, the seduction of power, Catholic guilt, remorse and finally the need for absolution. Robert De Niro is Desmond Spellacy, an ambitious Monsignor of an Catholic Archdiocese in Los Angeles, and Robert Duvall is his brother Tom, a middle-aged hardboiled LAPD detective, investigating the brutal murder of a young would be actress.
Both have a strongly developed sense of Catholic sin that binds them even when their contrasting personalities conflict.
It is their scenes together, with all that desperately needs to be said and yet is not, despite the love they have for each other, that makes this one of the most brilliantly acted films of its time.
The film opens sixteen years after the murder in 1963. Duvall, retired from the force, visits his brother who was transfered to a threadbare parish in the desert years earlier because of the scandal.
I"m going to die, Tommy. Des tells him. The arteries to the heart are shot.
The scene then dissolves to 1947 to a magnificent cathedral with Des presiding over the wedding of Jack Amsterdam"s daughter.
Jack is a powerful construction contractor with a lifetime of misdeeds, now a pillar of the Catholic community and trying to buy his way into heaven by building Catholic schools.
The dying Amsterdam (Charles Durning) taints all he comes in contact with, and personifies corruption, literally bringing it into the church, disrupting the ceremony with his incessant coughing while his daughter is already several months pregnant out of wedlock.
The relationship between Amsterdam and Desmond will be a contentious point with the brothers.
Unknown to Jack, years earlier Tom had acted as bag man for his payoffs to Vice and though busted for it was not indicted.
His attempts to put Des straight about Jack are met with irritation and an unwillingness to hear the truth, because of his ambition to succeed the aging Cardinal, (Cyril Cusack) an appointment of which Jack has some say.
Jack"s hypocrisy, (he is made Catholic Layman of the year) and his disregard for the lives he destroys, (Brenda, one of his hookers (Rose Gregorio) commits suicide after Jack refuses to see her) will goat Tom to bring him in, having uncovered evidence it was Amsterdam who introduced the victim to the pornographer, who murdered her. Unfortunately Des also knew the victim, albeit only in passing.
Jack"s liaison with the church, Dan Campion, (Ed Flanders) is also facing ruin from the scandal that will ensue, (he was the first to have a sexual tryst with the victim) and tries to get Des to stop Tom"s investigation, informing him that she was the hitchhiker they picked up on their way back from Santa Anita and if they go down Des will go with them.
Finally the film returns to 1963.
For years Tom has carried the guilt that he ruined his brother"s life and he needs his forgiveness.
Reaffirming the love between them despite all that has happened, Des leads Tom to the plot he has set aside for himself and he hopes one day for Tom where they both may rest safe from worldly temptations.
It is one of the most moving moments in the film. Requiescat in pace.
Genre............: Crime/Drama
Year.............: 1981
Country..........: USA
Director.........: Ulu Grosbard
Source...........: Retail (not my rip)
DVD Format.......: PAL
DVD Size.........: DVD5
Programs used....: -
Screen Format....: 16:9
Audio Language...: English
Audio Format.....: 2.0
Subtitles........: Dutch/Nederlands
Runtime..........: 108 min
Menu.............: [X] Yes
DVD Extras.......: [ ] No
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