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WSWS : Arts Review : Film Reviews

Filthy lives have filthy consequences

Road to Perdition, directed by Sam Mendes

By Joanne Laurier
25 July 2002

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Road to Perdition, directed by Sam Mendes, screenplay by David Self, based on the 
graphic novel by Max
Allan Collins and Richard Piers Rayner

Director Sam Mendes� Road to Perdition is the officially-approved US film of the 
moment, overwhelmingly
endorsed by the media and starring �America�s favorite actor,� Tom Hanks. An unstated 
assumption is that
the movie�s pedigree makes it an obligatory cultural or quasi- cultural experience for 
certain social layers. It is
a gangster film with darkened images meant to impart an art-house quality. Set in the 
early Depression era, it
is also insinuated that a social insight or two can be found lurking in the shadows.

Road to Perdition, even more than Mendes� previous much-acclaimed film, American 
Beauty, is fool�s gold.
The filmmaker has once again wrapped up crude banalities in shiny tin foil. But at 
least the latter film made
some pretense at critiquing American materialism and careerism.

Adapted from the comic-book novel (the third major film adaptation of a graphic novel 
this year!) by Max
Allan Collins and Richard Piers Rayner, the film centers on father-son relationships 
in the upper echelons of
an Irish mob in Rock Island, Illinois in 1931. Michael Sullivan (Tom Hanks) is the 
right-hand man and surrogate
son of gang chief John Rooney (Paul Newman). Sullivan�s older son, Michael Jr., 
witnesses his father and
Rooney�s son Connor (Daniel Craig) machine gun dissident gang members.

Connor�s long-time jealousy toward Sullivan now finds an �excusable� outlet: he kills 
Sullivan�s wife and
younger son, whom he mistakes for the young Michael. Michael Sr., knowing that Rooney 
will protect Connor,
turns to the Capone gang, run by Frank Nitti (Stanley Tucci), in Chicago. Although 
Sullivan is viewed as an
asset and commands much respect from his underworld cronies, Nitti is protecting 
Connor and hires a killer to
dispatch the unrelenting elder Sullivan. The Michaels, father and son, head for a 
relative�s home in a town
called Perdition, hotly pursued by Maguire (Jude Law), a psychotic assassin who kills 
his victims and then
photographs them. The Sullivan�s six-week journey and struggle for survival form the 
film�s core.

The biggest problem with Road to Perdition is that it is false from beginning to end. 
In the first place, the film
depicts some imaginary breed of gracious and principled gangsters. In an early 
sequence, Sullivan comes
home to his beautifully understated house, with an adoring wife and two perfectly 
normal children waiting for
him. It is the picture of an ordinary middle class family. One forgets, or is intended 
to forget, that prior to
walking across the threshold Michael Sullivan has been out murdering people for his 
equally charming and
respectable gangland boss, John Rooney.

A description in the movie�s screenplay highlights this point. Michael Jr. is 
�watching in silence, cautious yet
fascinated by the mysteries of a father�s ritual. ... Sullivan removes his cufflinks 
and places them in a box of
his personal things ... removes his tie and gracefully lays it on the bed ... takes 
off his jacket, revealing a
holstered COLT 45, removes the holstered gun and places it on the bed.� In fact, this 
loving father and
husband is nicknamed �The Angel of Death.�

The portrayal of mob czar Nitti as a respectable and fair-minded businessman is 
equally ridiculous and
reprehensible. Nitti, known as The Enforcer, ran the crime syndicate while Capone was 
in prison in late 1920s
and early 1930s (he eventually committed suicide in 1943). This is the sort of company 
Nitti kept:

�In 1933, Frank Nitti�s leading labor terrorist, Three Fingers Jack White, recruited 
Fur Sammons to help fight
the Touhy gang in the labor wars of 1933.

�It was an excellent choice, Sammons was a certified psychopath and a killer and he 
took enormous pride in
both these facts. He specialized in labor terror although, like White, Sammons� record 
was long and varied.

�In 1900 Sammons and four others kidnapped an eleven-year-old schoolgirl off the 
street, raped her and
than beat her so savagely she almost died. The girl weighed 85 pounds. They broke her 
nose, punched out
one of her eyes, and stabbed her in the vaginal area with a pencil� [John William 
Tuohy, Just Plain Crazy].

Whether Nitti was also a psychopath (like Capone and Sammons), or merely employed 
them, Mendes�
characterization is a travesty. In the film�s production notes, the director justifies 
his irresponsible
glamorization: �I wanted to put a lie to some of the perceived notions about 
gangsters. You will see no
double-breasted pinstripe suits, no spats, only one machine gun, and that has a very 
specific and unusual
presence in the movie.� One wants to ask: whence comes this desire to prettify thugs 
and murderers?

Within this context, the filmmakers take meticulous and absurd care to distinguish 
between a good man who
has, more or less incidentally, led a bad life (Sullivan and the mobsters) and a 
genuinely bad man (Maguire, a
grungy toothed random killer). The argument is meant to be the scaffolding for the 
movie�s father and son
theme. The production notes ask: �Can a man who has led a bad life achieve redemption 
through his child?�
Of course no man is simply �bad.� Even an assassin has human qualities. However, Road 
to Perdition is
making a different argument: that a horrible, gruesome job has no apparent impact on 
an individual�s inner
nature.

In any event, the comment about leading a �bad life� is fraudulent, because neither 
Sullivan nor Rooney nor
Nitti is truly portrayed as a �bad man.� On the contrary, they are quite 
sympathetically presented, as �men of
honor.� Only the outsider, the hit man who seems to enjoy his work, Maguire, is cast 
in a negative light.

There is no serious exploration of the father-son theme. Michael Jr. fails to 
experience any serious inner
conflict once he discovers that his father murders people for a living! He is 
presented to us as a sensitive
soul, yet he does not even seem to hold his father responsible in any manner for the 
deaths of his mother
and younger brother. And Sullivan�s insistence on seeking revenge places his surviving 
son in danger and
nearly costs him his life. That hardly constitutes redemption for leading a �bad 
life.� The film lazily glosses
over this and every other discrepancy.

1931

The spectator never obtains any clear conception as to why the film is set in 1931. 
Nothing serious is made of
or revealed about the period. With the exception of a few passing comments and a 
brief, idyllic interlude with
a farming couple, the film�s only reference to this pivotal time is through costume 
and set detail�references
that are fundamentally superficial and extraneous to the plot drama. The original 
screenplay describes �a
vast stretch of closed factories ... and a line of hungry people outside a soup 
kitchen� during the opening
sequence. Such material would not have solved the film�s problems, but, remarkably, 
neither the closed
factories nor hungry people made it into the final product.

In the section of the film�s production notes entitled Circa 1931, much is made of the 
world- wide hunt for
period clothing. This brings to mind Orson Welles�s clothing solution for his low- 
budget masterpiece, Othello.
When costumes did not arrive in time for the shooting of the first scene due to the 
bankruptcy of the film�s
Italian backers, Welles improvised by setting the action not in the street, where the 
actors would have to be
costumed, but in a steam bath, where towels alone would do. As opposed to Welles, 
high-roller Mendes and
his crew were endlessly obsessed with the secondary, the trivial.

Producer Dean Zanuck talks about setting Road to Perdition in �the last mythic 
American landscape�the
1930s, the Depression era, when there was still space to lose yourself in the vastness 
of America ... where
there were mystical golden cities rising up, like Chicago.�

This is a rewriting of history. By 1931 the US was experiencing its most severe 
economic devastation in
modern history, resulting in misery for wide layers of the population. Stock market 
losses in October 1929
alone amounted to $16 billion, an astronomical sum at the time. In 1929 more than half 
of all Americans were
living below a minimum subsistence level and by 1931, a year in which the GNP fell 8.5 
percent, nearly 20
percent of the population was unemployed. By 1932, between 12 and 15 million people, 
25-30 percent of the
work force, were jobless, as manufacturing output fell to 54 percent of its 1929 
level. None of this is even
hinted at in Road to Perdition, much less the mood of growing anger that would explode 
in conflicts with
revolutionary implications a few years later. This is a film that essentially takes 
place, despite the illicit nature
of the characters� occupation, within a comfortable, middle class milieu.

Why is there such a level of falsification in Road to Perdition? Ignorance and 
laziness about historical issues
undoubtedly play a major role. Also, as Mendes himself states, in his desire to be 
different, he feels able to
play fast and free with historical facts. The creators of Road to Perdition can make 
history whatever they
want it to be, because it does not much matter if they get it right. They feel no 
obligation to anyone and
there are no consequences. Given the present state of film criticism, there are no 
challenges to this method.

One senses as well that in the film�s diehard insistence on gentlemanly gangsters 
�with a classic sense of
style,� there is more than a tinge of whitewashing going on in regard to contemporary 
America�s corporate
and ruling circles. Precisely at the moment when the criminalization of the ruling 
elite is such a pressing issue,
when daily revelations emerge about unconstitutional, undemocratic, gangster-like 
method employed at home
and abroad, a film appears with much fanfare that alters the historical record, 
painting gangsters in rosy
colors. There is some significance to this. It comes out of a certain mood and 
perceived need. There is a
certain defensive self-justification at work.

Mendes, the Zanucks and Hanks are making an argument here, that wealth and corruption 
do not have any
long-lasting significance for the individuals or the society involved. There is never 
any indication in the film
that the characters have carried out heinous crimes. (Hanks�s glare is not a 
substitute for that.) Murderers
seem entirely untouched by their actions. So the argument can be made that filthy 
lives and filthy men can
beget a wholesome son and future generations. But filthy lives do have consequences.

The American elite is guilty of corruption and thievery at home and murderous 
activities against peoples
abroad. Mendes and company would like us to think that none of this prevents an 
individual from being a
�good person.� Indeed this is a social layer coming to realize that crime and 
corruption have their attractive
qualities. The title, Road to Perdition, is more apt when applied to the project 
itself and the trajectory of the
social milieu than to anything intended by the film�s creators.







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