Mann and De Niro Reunite for Machine

http://www.latinoreview.com/news.php?id=1736



Rating:A

A Masterpiece


Starring:
Robert De Niro
Screenplay: David Levien and Brian Kopelman. Based on the novel by Don Winslow
Director(s):

MPAA Rating: Unavailable
Reviewed by: El Mayimbe - 03.30.07

THE WINTER OF FRANKIE MACHINE
By David Levien and Brian Kopelman
Based on the novel by Don Winslow
134 pages

Dimelo Loco!

That is what Pax and Maddox are going to learn to say after their parent’s Brad (“***** whipped”) Pitt and Angelina Jolie get hitched this spring in El Mayimbe’s homeland of the Dominican Republic!

I can already hear the sounds of merengue and smell the mangu, chicharones de pollo, and the dulce de habichuelas at their reception. That’s buck wild. Brad is getting married in DR. I love it. For the love of God, if ANYONE knows where I can get Dominican food PERIOD in the state of California, please shoot me an email! I am getting tired of substituting whack ass Cuban food for Dominican food. Don’t get me wrong, I got lots of love for Cuban food, and Cubans get busy in Glendale, pero Anda Diablo, too much cumin for my tastes.

Anyway, what else is going on?

Well, it is super cool that Mob Season is upon us with the last season of THE SOPRANOS a week away on HBO with the added treat of my favorite show in years ENTOURAGE right after.

Speaking of the Mob, folks did I read my one bad ass script – THIS WEEKEND’S READ!

David Levien and Brain Kopelman - who wrote the recent Ocean’s 13, which we reviewed here on the site, took it down, then put back up – crafted themselves one hell of a tale based on Don Winslow’s novel.

THE WINTER OF FRANKIE MACHINE is the leanest, tightest script I read so far this year – and the **** is hot. It reads like the radio play style which I see a lot in Vogue these days with screenplays which means no INT or EXT or DAY or NIGHT or the annoying CONTINUOUS. Just the location, what happens, the characters, the dialogue and no fluff. No Shane Black comments – nada. Complete respect for the source material and plotting which runs at a tight and lean 134 pages. It is not a dense script by no means. Everything is spaced out. One, two line, spaced out description and action. Aspiring writers, it would be wise to track this one down for the plotting, the setup and the payoff and especially the presentation.

So what is it about?

Frank Machianno thought he had quit the Mob for good. The 62-year-old Vietnam vet has settled into a quiet life in his native San Diego as an avid businessman and an honest one at that. He run’s three up and coming local businesses. He operates a bait shack on Ocean Beach Pier (“Frankie the Bait Guy”). He's got the linen service (“Frankie the Seafood Guy”) and the seafood company (“Frankie the Seafood Guy”). He’s got surfing as his hobby and catches a set of waves every chance he gets.

Frankie has an ex-wife he tolerates, PATTY, a girlfriend who's perfect for him DONNA (the equally workaholic owner of a high-end boutique), and a daughter JILL he dotes on who Frankie is trying to put through med school – she just got in. That’s just the initial setup because regardless of him being Frankie the Bait guy, he is…

…FRANKIE ****ING MACHINE!

There's just one problem. You don't retire from the Mob. Frankie Machine has killed lots of people and he has seen too many things. Regardless of how Frankie wants to lead a quite and peaceful life, for guys like him, the past always comes back to bite you in the ass.

Frankie's sharpshooting skills are legendary (he wasn't called "The Machine" for nothing), and when the head of the Los Angeles syndicate calls in a favor, OUR CALL TO ADVENTURE, he finds himself back in the game. He needs the 50k to just go to a meeting to have MOUSE JUNIOR’s back. Frankie can use the money for his daughter JILL’s college education.

Turns out Frankie was set up, but it's too late to change course; he's already neck-deep in the world of the thick-necked. Suddenly, people are trying to kill him -- and from corners of the Mafia that don't make sense. Unexpectedly he gets pulled back into the dangerous world he left behind.

The script vividly evokes the worlds of drugs, dirty politics, and organized crime. We basically watch one man Frankie, cope with his past catching up to him in the worst way. A great portrait of the "Mickey Mouse mob" of Southern California, satisfying mystery, and more than that just a great portrait of a formidable but not honorable man whose motto is "it's a lot of work being me."

Since a lot of the script involves flashbacks while Frankie tries to figure out what past episode has him in hot water, the overall effect of the script is like sitting around as a very colorful friend tells tales of the old days. And great tales they are. The entire script is narrated by Frankie in VOICEOVER and reads like a “How to be an efficient hit man for the mob” manual.

Through flashbacks, we get to know how Frankie got his nickname and what his life was like before he retired to his more respectable life of a businessman. Frankie tries hard to figure out why anyone would want to kill him now, and so he goes over past hits, making a mental list of all those who would want him dead.

Folks it’s a great ****ing story!

Frankie is a character that you can't help but love, despite his criminal past. You will fall in love with Frankie Machine; when he is good and when he is a bad mother****er…

…and he is one BAD mother****er!

Frankie is the perfect anti-hero and tailor fit for Robert DeNiro. This is a mob hitman movie and his escapades during his Mafioso days will thrill fans of this genre.

Reminds me of Brian Hegeland’s PAYBACK and his awesome draft of MAN ON FIRE when it originally took place in Italy when Denzel’s character systematically took down the entire mafia.

The action is fast, the characters are good. The script starts out relating Frank's new made life, and bounces back and forth from the past to the present. His past life in the Mob is so good and interesting, full of great scenarios. The bouncing back and forth is not confusing and makes for good reading. SPY GAME followed a similar structure. You will follow Frankie through his past and present at break-neck speed. He goes underground and tries to remember what past crime has led to this present problem.

He is on the run from the Mob and that run is exciting and fun.

Bullets go flying and bodies start dropping.

Mindful of Bronsen's The Mechanic, THE WINTER OF FRANKIE MACHINE is terrific tense thriller starring an antihero struggling to survive his past. The key to this action-packed tale is Frank and his adversaries who seem genuine, which makes the suspense that much more intense and intriguing.

Because I read a lot and im schooled up the ass in SETUP/PAYOFF techniques, I saw it very early in the beginning who set up Frankie. I knew who did it, it wasn’t on the nose or anything but the script didn’t tell you why until the final 3rd act where it belongs. The big reveal was organic.

SCRIPT READING/WRITING TIP OF THE DAY

Usually in man on the run thrillers like this and THE FUGITIVE – the ultimate bad guy – who is revealed in the 3rd act has to be PLANTED or introduced in the 1st act and before the 1st act ends – OUR SETUP for the eventual PAYOFF in the 3rd act.

Like I said before, knowing this rule, I knew who the bad guy is but just because you know who it is doesn’t mean the journey wasn’t fun. Trust me folks FRANKIE MACHINE will take on one hell of a journey.

Mob fans and DeNiro fans in general, look out for this one. A masterpiece.

HASTA EL PROXIMO CAPITULO…

YO SOY EL MAYIMBE!

[email protected]

This is real interesting. I like the plot. I can't wait to see this one. Plus, with De Niro in it, it should be great.
 
http://www.collider.com/entertainment/news/article.asp/aid/5187/tcid/1

Posted by Frosty


According to a very reliable source, it looks like all the people looking forward to a new Robert De Niro and Martin Scorsese mafia movie are about to be disappointed.

The reason? It seems that Mr. Scorsese has dropped out of directing “Frankie Machine” and, according to my source, it seems quite likely the production will fall apart without his involvement.



For those who hadn’t heard of “Frankie Machine,” the film was being made at Paramount and the original title was “The Winter of Frankie Machine.” The story was about a retired hit man and back in March of this year, Variety reported that “Ocean's Thirteen” screenwriters Brian Koppelman and David Levien were writing the screenplay for De Niro before Scorsese got involved.



Obviously I’m a huge fan of Martin Scorsese mafia movies, with “Goodfellas” being one of my favorite films of all time. So while he may have dropped out of the film and disappointed those who wanted to see another team-up, perhaps they have something even better being planned. Let’s hope so.
 
If that is true:

NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
This sounds great..but does seem to me like Sexy Beast, which stars Ray Winstone and Ben Kingsley.

Either way...this is going to be good with Schorsese attached to direct and De Niro as the lead guy.
 
With a script that good they need to get a new director signed.
 
i cant wait for this movie.
another classic for sure
 
i feel like ive just been blueballed .
 
Director Michael Mann will develop Frankie Machine as a star vehicle for Robert De Niro at Paramount Pictures, says Variety.

De Niro and Jane Rosenthal produce through their Tribeca Films. Alex Tse has just been set to do a major overhaul of the concept under Mann's supervision.

The drama is an adaptation of Don Winslow novel "The Winter of Frankie Machine." De Niro will play Frank Machianno, a mob hitman who has retired to run a bait shop. He agrees to help the son of a mob boss resolve a dispute with another Mafioso but is forced to turn into Frankie Machine again when he realizes he's been set up to be killed.

De Niro came aboard the project when Paramount bought the book in November of 2005. A draft was original written by Brian Koppelman and David Levien.

De Niro and Mann previously teamed for 1995's Heat.

I don't like Mann's visual style, it's always the same. I hope it doesn't look as godawful as Miami Vice....
 
This is great news, Mann is an amazing director and perfect for this type of film :up:
 
Awesome news.....glad to see they got someone top notch
 
With Mann moving forward with "Public Enemies", I guess this has been put on hold again.

____

Any who I have the script if anyone wants it PM me. It's a great read. With an excellent ending

Everybody loves Pete the bait guy... and why not? Pete the bait guy loves everybody.
 
Alex Tse, who is writing the film for Michael Mann, provided Collider with a fantastic update:

http://www.collider.com/entertainment/interviews/article.asp/aid/11012/tcid/1

For those that can't view it:

Alex Tse: With Frankie Machine, I've been working pretty intensely with Michael while he's been finishing Public Enemies. And hopefully I don't screw that one up.

Collider: There's been a lot of talk that De Niro will do that...

Alex Tse: Yeah. He's also a producer on the film. I mean, there's a cloud of urgency on the film and we'll see.
 
Definitely.

Hopefully they've included The Drug Wars, which was the best part of the novel. :up:

Is that a flashback part of the book ? Is it a good book ? Ive been thinking of buying it to see what it might look like in Mann's hands, are we talking Heat or Collateral ?
 
Is that a flashback part of the book ? Is it a good book ? Ive been thinking of buying it to see what it might look like in Mann's hands, are we talking Heat or Collateral ?

Flashback.

The novel is mainly told through the eyes of the older Machine (Robert) as he's trying to track down who set him up, but there are numerous flashbacks which set up his predicament. You basically learn how he became the Machine. There's a nice compare and contrast to how he used to be and what he is now.

It's definitely more Heat than Collateral. It was meant for De Niro -- even before he signed on, that was the first actor you thought of.
 

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