Actors: Gerard Depardieu, Jacqueline Bisset, Paul Hipp
Director: Abel Ferrara
Format: Blu-ray, Widescreen
Language: English
Number of discs: 1
Rated: Unrated
Studio: MPI HOME VIDEO
Release Date: August 25, 2015
Run Time: 108 minutes
Ferrara battled IFC Films over their request
for an R-rated cut of his film about excess, leading to a falling out with the
company. Though this release includes a rated version, I don’t believe it is one
that was approved by the director. For one thing, the length has been shortened
greatly, no doubt removing many of the scenes of early sexual debauchery. To my
knowledge, the unrated director’s cut is unavailable. The Blu-ray release
includes only a trailer for special features, as Ferrara was likely unwilling to contribute
commentary or interviews for the release.
Though there have been name changes and we are
told several times that the characters within Abel Ferrara’s Welcome to New York are entirely
fictional, the very emphasis on this clarification makes it clear that the filmmaker
wants you to know where the narrative inspiration was derived from. Much of the
film’s power comes from the reality that the events are based on a widely
covered international story about former International Monetary Fund chief
Dominique Strauss-Kahn, whose escape from charges of sexual assault against a
hotel maid became a clear allegory for the entitlement mentality of the rich
and powerful. Ferrara
achieves this without glorifying or condemning the actions of its protagonist,
making for a film without bias, but which also feels void of any relevant
commentary.
Standing in for
the Strauss-Kahn character is Gérard Depardieu as sex-addicted international
banker, Devereaux, whose brief business trip to New York is filled with extravagance in
excess that leads to imprisonment. Split up into sections, the first act of the
film unflinchingly portrays the over-indulgence of Devereaux, a man whose
arrival to his luxurious Manhattan
hotel room is met by prostitutes and drugs. Despite his reputation for business,
we primarily see Devereaux’s gluttonous approach to life’s pleasures, whether
it be food, alcohol or sex. When faced with the consequences of his actions,
his insatiable appetites also extend to a love of power, as Devereaux
immediately claims ‘diplomatic immunity’ in an attempt to escape punishment.
The second
section of the film focuses on the bleakness of the American prison system as a
stark contrast to the life of indulgence, and this is also where Devereaux’s
true character is revealed. This is best depicted in a strip search sequence,
which exposes the physicality of greed and gluttony in Depardieu’s own
over-indulged physique within a world of limitation and restriction. In the
third act of the film, these two polarized worlds come crashing together in the
court of law, though very little of the running time is actually spent in the
trial. Ferrara
is more interested in the complacency of Devereaux, whose worries seem to
dissipate once his billionaire wife (Jacqueline Bisset) arrives to ‘fix’ the
situation.
Bisset tends to
steal most scenes in the second half of the film, primarily because of how
passive Devereaux becomes when forced to face his crimes. It is unclear whether
Devereaux believes his own claims of innocence or simply knows that wealth and
power will inevitably be his savior. Either way, Ferrara is more interested in the battle
between justice and the power of wealth than he is judging the actions of the
man. Because of this, the film shifts away from character study before a clear
understanding of Devereaux’s mentality is offered, and also allows the film to
present the narrative without judgment or commentary. While Ferrara ’s film lacks the glorification seen
in Martin Scorsese’s The Wolf of Wall
Street, it also reaches the end credits without any of the condemnation
either.
Entertainment Value:
6/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 7.5/10
Historical
Significance: 6/10
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