Empire (UK)

THE KING OF STATEN ISLAND

- ALEX GODFREY

Mayor Apatow does it again.

OUT 12 JUNE / DIGITAL CERT 15 / 137 MINS

DIRECTOR Judd Apatow

CAST Pete Davidson, Marisa Tomei, Bill Burr, Bel Powley, Maude Apatow

PLOT Depressed wannabe tattooist Scott (Davidson), 24 years old and living at home with his mum Margie (Tomei) in New York’s Staten Island, can’t get over his father’s death, 17 years after the fact. Having never moved on, his life is in stasis. Something has to give.

IN LAST MONTH’S Empire, Judd Apatow said that he increasing­ly wants to hit the tone of the films that shaped him — most notably the work of Hal Ashby (Being There, Harold And Maude)

and James L. Brooks (Terms Of Endearment, Broadcast News). Films that are as dramatic as they are funny. But Apatow’s films have never been mere comedies (not that there’s anything wrong with that). His first, The 40-Year-old Virgin, was broad and bawdy but enormously sweet, and all of his films since — from Knocked Up to Trainwreck — have gone for tears as well as laughs. His latest, The King Of Staten Island,

though, takes itself that little bit more seriously. Even if it does feature a cat tattoo with its owner’s belly-button standing in for the bumhole.

Saturday Night Live’s Pete Davidson co-writes, produces and stars in this film that draws, hugely, from his own upbringing. How much you fall for it will hang on how much you warm to Davidson, who, partly for plot reasons, partly not, is a bit of a blank canvas. His

character, Scott, who has attention deficit disorder, is as stubborn as he is numb, unable to commit to a relationsh­ip, or a job, or to adulthood. Selfloathi­ng and self-destructiv­e, he smokes weed to slow down time. He may or may not be a talented tattooist, but after he inks a young kid’s arm on the fly, the boy’s enraged fireman dad, Ray (comedian Bill Burr), comes knocking — and ends up dating Scott’s mother (Marisa Tomei). From there, mostly thanks to Scott, who is hellbent on sabotaging their happiness, it’s a struggle, for everyone.

Scott, if it wasn’t clear already, is a bit of a manchild. There’s much familiar Apatow territory here — the stoner friends, the bro banter, the inventive insults (“You look like an anorexic panda,” a whacked-out Scott is told at one point). A skit about Stomp, dick jokes, and much misguided masculinit­y. Yet it is all slightly muted.

This is a more freewheeli­ng Apatow. Directoria­lly he’s a little looser, and if the humour feels familiar, it’s played a little more naturalist­ically. It speaks volumes that he’s hired the great cinematogr­apher Robert Elswit here — Elswit, who has lensed most of Paul Thomas Anderson’s films, including There Will Be Blood and Inherent Vice, as well as Dan Gilroy’s Nightcrawl­er, brings a lovely warmth to this one, making it feel more tangible, less shiny and clean than Apatow’s usual films. The (slightly) subtler tones fit with Scott — muted makes sense for a story about an emotionall­y numb protagonis­t on antidepres­sants. It also means it doesn’t hit as hard, as the comedy seems self-consciousl­y dialled-down, some of the raucous behaviour at odds with its presentati­on. Scott’s gang — a ragtag band of mostly well-meaning weed demons — leave little impression, certainly compared to the big personalit­ies in most of Apatow’s films.

Otherwise, though, Apatow surrounds Davidson with a compelling cast that create the fabric of the film: Bill Burr elevates Ray, playing it straight, giving it weight; Steve Buscemi, as one of Ray’s fireman colleagues, is predictabl­y great and, being a former fire-fighter himself, imbues the role with an undeniable honesty, and true feeling; Apatow’s daughter Maude, who appeared in some of her father’s earlier films but has come into her own in the likes of Ryan Murphy’s Hollywood, has major presence as Scott’s sister, eternally frustrated by him but determined to shake him out of his slumber.

Best of all, though, is Diary Of A Teenage Girl star Bel Powley, who plays Scott’s on-off girlfriend Kelsey, and owns this film. She is startlingl­y good — one of the most exciting actors around right now — and the screen sizzles whenever she shows up here, brimming with vibrancy, energy and authentici­ty. The film’s true breakout, she’s a real force, anchoring every scene she’s in, validating it all, giving it huge dramatic heft.

Powley and Burr are great in this film. They prop it up. Powley, especially, provides the dramatic chops Apatow’s reaching for, and the film works best when it’s not being bawdy, when it’s quieter, sweeter — there is a tenderness.

At its most successful, it’s a hang-out film: as everyone attempts to bond, it takes shape. It’s a longish and winding road, often perplexing­ly keeping itself at bay, and could do with more emotional highs and lows. Still, by the end, it gets you. It has some surprises.

VERDICT With The King Of Staten Island, Apatow goes for the heart — but with lesser yuks than usual and a subdued lead, it all kind of drifts by. Within it, though, are moments of real vigour and fragility.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Clockwise from main:
Pete Davidson as the “self-loathing and selfdestru­ctive” Scott; With his mother Margie (Marisa Tomei); At the game with Ray, his mum’s new boyfriend (Bill Burr); On the Staten Island Ferry with on-off squeeze Kelsey (Bel Powley).
Clockwise from main: Pete Davidson as the “self-loathing and selfdestru­ctive” Scott; With his mother Margie (Marisa Tomei); At the game with Ray, his mum’s new boyfriend (Bill Burr); On the Staten Island Ferry with on-off squeeze Kelsey (Bel Powley).
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom