Monument Ave.
Already Boston-based feature filmmaking seems in a rut -- take a tough
blue-collar neighborhood, a conflicted hero, and some wiseguys, add a few
variations, and you've got Next Stop, Wonderland, The North End, Southie, and
now Ted Demme's Monument Ave. For its variation this one boasts Denis Leary as
a Charlestown car thief whose complacent, larcenous lifestyle crumbles when
friends and relatives get whacked for perceived violations of the local code of
silence. Should he buck tradition and be a snitch (one of the film's previous
titles), turning in ruthless mob chieftain Colm Meaney to world-weary police
inspector Martin Sheen? Should he just count his money and keep quiet? Take
justice into his own hands?
As those questions stumble toward their predictable resolutions, most of the
film's best moments remain inconsequential -- Leary and his pals on coke
andbooze discussing popular movies, or cruising the streets in a cab and
alighting on an African-American who wandered into town by mistake. The latter
scene is jarring, if gratuitous, demonstrating the kind of edge and energy this
pedestrian effort otherwise lacks. Screens at the Cheri Thursday, September 10
at 7:45 p.m. and at the Copley Place Friday, September 1 at 1:15, 3:15, and
5:15 p.m. Director Ted Demme and star Denis Leary will appear to introduce
Thursday's 7:45 showing. At Cinema 320.
-- Peter Keough
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