
THE FUNERAL (R)
Director: Abel
Ferrara
Stars: Christopher Walken,
Chris Penn, Benicio Del Toro,
Vincent Gallo, Isabella Rossellini,
Annabella Sciorra, Paul Hipp
Running Time: 98 minutes.
Few contemporary film-makers depict the shattering
violence of New York's mean streets with quite the
same ferocity and intensity as maverick director Abel
Ferrara (Fear City, The King Of New York, etc). His
latest film has more depth and is much more
character-driven than most of his previous films.
Written by Ferrara's regular collaborator, Nicholas
St John, The Funeral centers around a criminal
family who are shattered by the murder of Johnny
(Vincent Gallo), their youngest son. But,
accustomed as they are to death and violence, the
death of Johnny still hits them hard. While the family
struggles to find answers, Johnny's older brothers Ray
(Christopher Walken) and Chez (Chris Penn) seek
vengeance. A series of flashbacks explores the nature
of the tumultuous relationship between the three
brothers, and depicts the events leading up to the
murder.
Like most of Ferrara's previous films, The Funeral is
grim stuff; gritty, sleazy, and decidedly unpleasant.
Ferrara's direction is stylish, and he doesn't shy away
from fairly graphic violence and some raw emotions,
which suits the confronting nature of the material. But
there is a point to it all. The Funeral is concerned
with the morality of violence, and the ties that bind a
family together. Ferrara and regular cinematographer
Ken Kelsch deliberately use gloomy lighting and
darkened interiors to great effect, creating an
unsettling mood.
Ferrara has assembled a strong cast to flesh out his
characters. Ferrara always brings out the best in
Walken, who is clearly a favorite of the director's.
Walken seems far more restrained on this outing,
although he still manages to colour his performance
with a number of his usual mannerisms. Penn is
extraordinarily volatile and explosive as Chez, the son
who seems to have inherited his father's madness,
and he brings an unnerving edge to his powerful
scenes.
Annabella Sciorra (who also co-produced the film)
and Isabella Rossellini have little to do as the
long-suffering wives of Ray and Chez, although their
roles illustrate perfectly the secondary role that
women play in this criminal fraternity, in which family
concerns and business matters are clearly defined and
quite separate.
© 1996-97 Greg King / Used With Permission