
Recently, producers Michael Shamberg and Stacey Sher have acquired the rights to a book written by Joaquin “Jack” Garcia, the title character to the film Making Jack Falcone, which will be produced by Paramount Pictures. The film follows Jack Garcia, a Cuban-American FBI agent who went undercover and infiltrated the Gambino crime family, coming within weeks of being a made man. Steven Soderbergh is set to direct, and he will be working again with a great writer named Peter Buchman, who wrote Soderbergh’s latest project, Che. Buchman was quoted saying that Falcone will be “a perfect vehicle for an actor with shape shifting tendencies; this is a mob man, after all, who moved fluidly not only between scenes but ethnicities.” The Hollywood Reporter also notes, “Paramount has several mob and

In my first post, “2009 Oscars: Why They’re Going to be ‘Revolutionary’”, I briefly discussed what was known as “response films” of the 1930s, which were made as a “response” to something awful in America, most notably The Great Depression. As it so happens, most of these films were gangster films. The 1930’s saw a surplus of gangster films such as Little Caesar in 1930, The Public Enemy in 1931, Scarface: The Shame of a Nation in 1932, and The Testament of Dr. Mabuse in 1933. I believe one of the reasons Hollywood is about to see more and more gangster films is because Hollywood is finally “responding” to the chaos that has amassed in the last eight years. Films have always been a commentary on American lifestyle, capitalism, and the current establishment. However, when the economic or social climate becomes abysmal, particular films are made to distract audiences from their current woes, especially gangster films. Now, one may of course question the validity of this theory, stating that the surplus of gangster or mob films of the 1990s as well as the 1970s (The Godfather, Serpico, Get Carter) were not in response to anything in particular. I happen to agree. The reason audiences saw so many gangster films in the 1970s and 1990s were because these were both decades in which all genres, not just the gangster film, were reinvented. The 1970s marked the beginning of modern films, and the 1990s marked the beginning of what film historians call post-modernism. However, in the upcoming years, the gangster genre, and all other genres, will not be reinvented, and 2010 will not mark a new era in film history. It is this reason that leads me to believe even more that the upcoming increase in gangster films will be because they are in response to the economic and political turmoil that America is currently facing. Audiences simply prefer it, and Hollywood subconsciously responds. Of course, it will be impossible to tell if this theory is true until the next decade comes to a close. However, after Making Jack Falcone and I Heard You Paint Houses are released, I recommend you keep an eye on the gangster films that are being picked up by studios and production companies alike. It’s time for the gangster to make a comeback in Hollywood, and that time is coming incredibly soon.