- Source: City Hall (1996 film)
City Hall is a 1996 American political thriller film directed by Harold Becker and starring Al Pacino, John Cusack, Bridget Fonda and Danny Aiello. The film was Becker's second collaboration with Pacino, having directed him in Sea of Love (1989).
Plot summary
The film opens as New York City Mayor John Pappas makes a speech. His admiring deputy mayor Kevin Calhoun watches and narrates the scene. Meanwhile, NYPD Detective Eddie Santos and mob figure Tino Zapatti kill each other in a shootout on a Brooklyn corner. A stray bullet from Santos' gun also kills a 6-year old boy.
Tino was the nephew of mob boss Paul Zapatti, and questions are raised as to why he was free on probation. To contain the outrage, deputy mayor Kevin Calhoun investigates. Internal Affairs sets about framing Santos as a dirty cop. Detective's Endowment Association lawyer Marybeth Cogan does her best to protect Santos' family and becomes Calhoun's reluctant ally.
Calhoun's investigation leads to Frank Anselmo, a Brooklyn political boss who has connections to the Zapatti family. Anselmo plants money at Zapatti's behest to frame Santos. Calhoun and Cogan continue to seek the truth from a number of sources, including Santos' partner and another Zapatti relative. After the murder of probation officer Larry Schwartz, they ultimately conclude that Judge Walter Stern had to be on the take. Mayor Pappas agrees that Stern must resign.
The scandal snowballs to the point where Zapatti instructs Anselmo to commit suicide rather than become an informant or go to jail. To protect his family, Anselmo shoots himself. Calhoun discovers that Stern owes his judgeship to a bribe that Anselmo delivered on behalf of the Zapatti's to keep Tito out of jail. Pappas engineered the scheme. Shocked and disheartened, Calhoun tells Pappas he must resign. Even though Pappas wants to fight the imminent scandal, he admires Calhoun's integrity and acquiesces.
The film ends as Calhoun campaigns at 86th and Broadway for New York City's 6th City Council district, determined to make the city a better place.
Cast
Al Pacino as Mayor John Pappas
John Cusack as Kevin Calhoun
Bridget Fonda as Marybeth Cogan
Danny Aiello as Frank Anselmo
David Paymer as Abe Goodman
Martin Landau as Judge Walter Stern
Anthony Franciosa as Paul Zapatti
Richard Schiff as Larry Schwartz
Lauren Vélez as Elaine Santos
Murphy Guyer as Captain Florian
John Finn as Commissioner Coonan
John Slattery as Detective George
Stanley Anderson as Train Conductor
Harry Bugin as Morty the Waiter
Fritz Hollings, the then-current U.S. Senator from South Carolina, plays Senator Marquand, whom Pappas and Calhoun lobby in order to land the Democratic National convention.
Former New York City mayor Ed Koch and Roma Torre have brief cameos in TV news broadcasts.
Production
In January 1994, it was announced Harold Becker had made a deal with Paramount Pictures to direct City Hall, a drama in the vein of Network written by Bo Goldman. The following month, it was announced Castle Rock Entertainment had picked up City Hall after Paramount let their option lapse.
Tom Cruise at one point was in preliminary negotiations to star in the film, but negotiations quickly fell apart.
Reception
= Critical response
=Roger Ebert gave the film two-and-a-half out of four stars and wrote, "Many of the parts of City Hall are so good that the whole should add up to more, but it doesn't." Janet Maslin had high praise for Danny Aiello's "beauty of a performance", calling it the "heart of the tale". Owen Gleiberman graded the film B-, writing, "if you’re going to travel the familiar labyrinth of corruption, it helps to have John Cusack as your guide." The Washington Post concluded, "What prevents 'City Hall' from being an outright failure is its intriguing sense of detail." Variety called City Hall a "Greek tragedy" which "aims to tell the dark truth about a modern metropolis yet doesn't stint on fun."
Many reviewers praised the chemistry of the two leads. The Daily Telegraph wrote, "the relationship between Pacino and Cusack is more than seductive enough to hold audience attention". In its 2.5 out of 4-star review, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution felt the film was "Less than the sum of its parts...But give it credit for trying." Philadelphia Daily News was grateful that the film, "gives us a political drama with engaging moral and ethical dimensions. The movie is a welcome change from the fluff of 'The American President' and the self-indulgent freak show that was 'Nixon'."
The film scores 58% on Rotten Tomatoes, and B- on CinemaScore.
= Box office
=The film was released on February 16, 1996 in 1,815 theatres. It debuted at number 4 at the United States box office, grossing $8 million. For its second weekend, it landed at number 6, grossing $13.8 million. The film grossed $20.3 million in the U.S. and Canada and $13.1 million internationally for a worldwide total of $33.4 million.
References
External links
City Hall at IMDb
City Hall at the TCM Movie Database
City Hall at Rotten Tomatoes
City Hall at Box Office Mojo
City Hall at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- City Hall (film)
- Harold Becker
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