Gangster No. 1

Gangster No. 1

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Paul McGuigan
Produced by Norma Heyman
Jonathan Cavendish
Screenplay by Johnny Ferguson
Louis Mellis
David Scinto[1]
Based on Gangster No.1 (play) 
by Louis Mellis
David Scinto
Starring Malcolm McDowell
Paul Bettany
David Thewlis
Saffron Burrows
Kenneth Cranham
Andrew Lincoln
Music by John Dankworth
Cinematography Peter Sova
Adrian Biddle
Edited by Andrew Hulme
Production
company
FilmFour Productions
Pagoda Film and Television Corporation
Road Movies Filmproduktion
British Screen Productions
British Sky Broadcasting
Filmboard Berlin-Brandenburg (FBB)
NFH Productions
Little Bird
Distributed by FilmFour
Release dates
June 9, 2000 (2000-06-09)
Running time
103 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Box office $30,915

Gangster No. 1 (pronounced Gangster Number One) is a 2000 British crime film directed by Paul McGuigan and starring Paul Bettany in the title role. It also features Malcolm McDowell, David Thewlis and Saffron Burrows. It is based on the play Gangster No.1 by Louis Mellis and David Scinto.[2]

Plot

The film opens with an unnamed, veteran British gangster (McDowell) attending a boxing match with friends. Upon hearing in conversation that a gangster by the name of Freddie Mays is to be released from prison after completing a 30-year sentence, he becomes upset and leaves without a word.

The narrative moves back in time to the 1960s, showing a younger Gangster (Bettany). He comes to the attention of a very influential London gangster, Freddie Mays (Thewlis), who recruits him to be an enforcer. The Gangster is eager to please, and while his violent actions at first dismay Mays, he soon proves his loyalty to Mays with creative ways of murder. However, the Gangster quickly becomes obsessed with and deeply jealous of Mays' glamorous lifestyle and success.

The Gangster soon discovers that Mays' main rival, Lennie Taylor (Jamie Foreman), is planning on killing Mays. Instead of warning his boss, the Gangster decides to let the attack take place, killing the only other member of his own gang who knew of the impending attack. It goes on as planned, and the Gangster sits in a car nearby to watch as Lennie and his gang shoot and stab Mays and slit the throat of his fiancée, Karen (Saffron Burrows). Later that same night the Gangster goes to Lennie's flat, shoots him in the leg, and then tortures him to death.

The Gangster discovers the following day that Mays did not die in the attack, and is hospitalised. Upon his recovery, Mays is unjustly convicted of Taylor's murder and sent to prison for a 30-year sentence. With Mays out of his way, the Gangster becomes leader of the gang and consolidates his power over the city's underworld. In a sequence spanning the intervening years between 1968 and 1999, he organizes a bank heist, opens a casino, fixes horse races, and builds his gang to over 300 men. The film's narrative returns to the aged Gangster at the boxing event.

The Gangster discovers that Karen also did not die, and is due to marry Mays, who has left prison a changed man. The two men meet in the flat that once belonged to Mays. The Gangster angrily denounces Mays, but Mays seemingly has no fight left in him, wanting only to marry Karen and retire in peace. The Gangster threatens Mays with a gun. He then gives Mays the gun and begs him to kill him, but Mays leaves.

The film closes with the Gangster, having apparently lost his mind, committing suicide by stepping off the top of a building, with his last words being "I'm number one".

Cast

Critical reception

The film was met with a generally positive critical reception and currently holds a "Certified Fresh" score of 73% at Rotten Tomatoes based on 51 reviews. Critics disliked the violence present throughout the movie but praised the performances and style.

Real life references

References

  1. Adam Dawtrey (2010-01-14). "Louis Mellis and David Scinto: Partners in and out of crime | Film". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2013-11-15.
  2. Taylor, Paul (1995-09-07). "Theatre; GANGSTER NO 1; Almeida Theatre, London". The Independent (London).

External links

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