Finally got around to watching this today.
There is a period in this film, from when Noodles and Max are kids all the way up to right before Noodles date with Deborah, where the movie is absolutely brilliant. That hour and a half or so is just incredible, and I loved every single second of it.
The rest of the movie, however, I did not like at all, I hate to admit.
The beginning had some cool, brutal shit, but nobody has any idea what the fuck is going on. Of course we understand later, but for that first 30 minutes or so you're sitting there confused and at some points down right bored since nothing's happening other than people walking around. When the movie FINALLY gets to De Niro's childhood, it then really picks up.
However, all that steam gets lost once Noodles goes on a date with Deborah. That date was just way too long, and while I understood the rape scene, meh... I don't know, that entire sequence just didn't sit well with me. First of all, the actress who was playing Deborah was just terrible. Jennifer Connelly as the child version was MUCH better than her, which is a shame. Secondly, it just dragged on far too long, and other than the little sequence on the boat, nothing was said of any meaning.
Now, past that, we get one more incredible scene when Noodles arrives back to Max's establishment. Great, hilarious part where Max kicks out his girlfriend to prove a point. I loved it, but after that... the movie goes right back downhill.
All of the sudden, for no reason, Max is "crazy" and he will explode on you if you call him crazy. WTF? I guess you could argue that was just a part of him setting up Noodles, to make sure he phones in the police, but still... that was fucking stupid and came out of nowhere. Plus, since Max is crazy at the end of the movie, that hurts the argument as well.
Then, the whole final act was just atrocious. First of all, like I mentioned, the Deborah character was completely a miscast. How could anyone ever suspend disbelief with that actress playing her is supposed to be over 60-years-old? She has chubby baby cheeks for fucks sake. So, I had trouble getting over that. And to make matter worse, the scene with her and Noodles in her dressing room was over long and nothing of any meaning was said.
And the whole Max is still alive and it was all a set up, "Kill me" crap... that was just stupid to me. And while Max jumping into the garbage truck was kind of a cool way for him to commit suicide, it still made hardly any sense and was completely unnecessary.
X, you say in your last post that:
Never before have I seen a crime/gangster film that so meticulously delved into the roots of what made these boys turn into men and to a life of crime, what their actual motivations are for what they do and what turned them into the men they are. No other crime film has ever properly shown the roots of what led the main characters to a life of crime quite like Once Upon a Time in America in my opinion.
I didn't see that at all, man. We didn't get into these characters heads, and we don't even know why they turned out the way they did. At no point is it addressed Things just go with the flow, which I don't mind sometimes, but I have to disagree man that we ever get a true feel of what's going on in these characters heads and what their motivations are.
Also, X... you like the last scene of De Niro smiling as he gets high, because that means the whole sequence when he was older could have been a dream of his. Well, I would have liked it more if Noodles could have come up with a better dream, because all that shit sucked, man.
All in all, for the flashes of brilliance in this movie, it gets a solid 7/10 from me. Like I said, I
LOVED a good half of it, but unfortunately... I just wasn't feeling the rest. In my opinion, this movie is nothing compared to The Godfather Part II (in my opinion, this is the greatest gangster movie ever made), Goodfellas, Casino, The Departed, and even the first Godfather (which I feel is sort of overrated, but it's still a great movie regardless).