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A GROTESQUE, INGLORIOUS LOOK AT CAPONE’S LAST YEAR

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Al Capone lived out his final years on a grand estate in Palm Island, Florida, with his wife, Mae, by his side and grandchild­ren running around the property. It sounds like a pretty nice end for the notorious Chicago gangster, until you realize that he spent those post Alcatraz years suffering from declining health, dementia and the longterm effects of a syphilis infection from when he was just a teenager that went untreated. Also? He was likely broke. Then he died of a heart attack on January 25, 1947. He was only 48.

It’s this chapter that gets the focus in “Capone,” a hallucinat­ory and messy (in all respects) film starring Tom Hardy as the once great crime boss who is now hardly recognizab­le to himself or his family and in a state of rapid decline.

With ashen skin, blood-red eyes and a voice that is so raspy as to be almost unintellig­ible, Hardy’s Capone looks like a drawing of a comic book gangster that’s gone too far.

“Fonse” (the name Al is not to be uttered on the property) totters around his well-groomed and cliche Floridian mansion in an open robe with a cigar (and, later, a carrot) hanging out of his mouth. When he’s not shouting at his wife (Linda Cardellini) or gardeners, he can often be found with a thousand-yard stare which either means he’s about to go into a flashback sequence or is soiling himself — he does both quite frequently. His decay is cartoonish, as though all of his past sins are oozing out of his brain and body. They are laid out just as chaoticall­y and unpleasant­ly in “Capone” for audiences to make sense of. “Capone” is the work of filmmaker Josh

Trank, who, you may recall, is the blockbuste­r wunderkind who became a bit of a pariah in under four years. His film “Chronicle” made him, at 27, a precious box office superstar who earned comparison­s to Spielberg and Cameron. But his decline started before he could make good on the assumption that he was the next big thing. He was then hired, and fired, from a Star Wars film. But perhaps his most infamous moment was when he distanced himself from his expensive “Fantastic Four” reboot a day before it opened (and bombed) with a tweet implying that studio interferen­ce ruined his once great film.

Although we’ll never get to see what he might have done left to his own devices with “Fantastic Four,” for better or worse “Capone” is fully a Josh Trank product. He wrote, edited and directed.

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