Directed by: Jim Jarmusch.
Written by: Jim Jarmusch.
Starring: Forest Whitaker (Ghost Dog), John Tormey (Louie), Cliff Gorman (Sonny Valerio), Frank Minucci (Big Angie), Richard Portnow (Handsome Frank), Tricia Vessey (Louise Vargo), Henry Silva (Ray Vargo), Victor Argo (Vinny), Isaach De Bankolé (Raymond), Camille Winbush (Pearline), Gary Farmer (Nobody).
In his
review of Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai, Roger Ebert wonders why more
people didn’t point out what he sees as the fact that the main character in the
film is insane. Ebert’s reasoning is solid. Forest Whitaker plays the title
character in modern day Jersey City as a mob assassin who lives by the ancient
rules of the samurai and communicates only by carrier pigeons. That’s not
normal behavior – and in fact one of the film’s funniest scenes has Louie (John
Tormey), the mobster Ghost Dog works for, try and explain to his bosses what
Ghost Dog’s name is and why he can’t just call him up *”Did you just say he
contacts you through a bird?”). Perhaps the reason why no one mentions that
Ghost Dog is insane, despite all the evidence that he is, is because he’s seems
so calm, so sure of himself at every moment in the film. He lives by a code in
a world where no one else does – and is willing to do anything for that code.
He lives the way he does because it makes sense to him in a world where nothing
else does. It gives him something to hold onto.
Like
all of Jim Jarmusch’s films, Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai is strange from
the beginning – it has to rank among the strangest films about a hit man ever
made. Whitaker’s Ghost Dog gets himself in trouble – through no fault of his
own – when he completes the first job we see him given in the movie. He is to
take out a mobster who is sleeping with the boss’ daughter, Louise (Tricia
Vessey). He does so, but is seen by the Louise, mean her father decides he
needs to take out Ghost Dog – and perhaps Louie, the man Ghost Dog works for as
well. Ghost Dog is loyal to Louie – he is his retainer, and Ghost Dog treats
him as a samurai would his master – he is willing to do anything for him. With
both his own life, and Louie’s, on the line, Ghost Dog decides to do the only
thing he can – and kill every other mobster around. These scenes of harsh,
brutal violence are contrasted against some gentler ones of Ghost Dog
interacting with his best friend, Raymond (Jarmusch regular Isaach De Bankolé),
who speaks no English, and because Ghost Dog doesn’t speak French, neither
knows what the other one is saying – and a young girl named Pearline (Camille
Wimbush). At times, there almost seem to be two movies going on – with only
Whitaker’s eerily calm Ghost Dog connecting them.
Like
his other movies, Ghost Dog is basically about an outsider – someone who
doesn’t fit in with the world around him, but doesn’t really want to either.
This is one of Whitaker’s best performances – the one that springs immediately
to mind whenever I think of the actor. He may have won an Oscar for going over
the top nasty (brilliantly) in The Last King of Scotland (2006) – but Whitaker
has mainly made a career out of playing men who are somewhat gentler than his
hulking appearance suggests. His Ghost Dog is willing, and able, to kill
without feeling or remorse – but neither does he take pleasure in it. He is
spookily calm at every point in the movie, and this makes him a strange
character to center a movie around – but a perfect one for Jarmusch.
Jarmusch
has fun in other areas of Ghost Dog as well – the gangsters in the film aren’t
so much realistic as they are parodies of movie gangsters, and Jarmusch has fun
with them as they discuss hip hop, or in one scene dance around to rap music,
before Ghost Dog’s most inventive kill. Jarmusch also throws in the strange
view of a man building a boat on his rooftop – how’s he going to get it down,
no one knows – but it shows that at least Ghost Dog isn’t the only insane
person living in this world. Gary Farmer shows up here again for one scene –
once again playing a character named Nobody, and like in Dead Man, delivers the
perfect line “Stupid fucking white man”. For all I know, he’s the same
character as in Dead Man – more than a century later, but still going strong.
Ghost
Dog is a little slighter than much of Jarmusch’s work. Like always, he’s not so
much interested in plot as he is in character and mood – but at nearly two
hours, the film certainly drags at points, and starts to feel repetitive. But
he’s clearly having fun playing around in genre film. It isn’t the genre
twisting masterwork of Dead Man, but it’s an odd, strangely hypnotic film. I’ve
never seen anything quite like before – and I doubt I’ll see anything like it
again anytime soon.
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