'Black Mass': Movie Review

Find out what makes this movie one of the best dramas of 2015.

Rated R

Four out of five stars

It’s interesting that "Black Mass" is being released the same weekend that marks the 25th anniversary of the release of "Goodfellas," because it’s impossible not to compare the two. Both are stylish dramas about organized crime, both have stellar ensemble casts, and both take place in roughly similar time periods ("Goodfellas" is far more sprawling, while Black Mass is confined to about a decade).

But "Black Mass" isn’t "Goodfellas," or "Casino," or "The Sopranos," or any other gangster movie where you know the main guys are scum but you like them anyway. "Black Mass" makes it very clear: Jimmy “Whitey” Bulger -- and almost everyone around him -- is a very bad man who did inexcusable things. There’s little to no glamour here -- no one’s eating lobster in prison or committing crimes to a classic rock soundtrack. "Black Mass" is grittier, darker and ultimately more real than most of what’s come before it.

The feeling you’re not watching something new and fresh is one of the things that stops "Black Mass" from being a great movie. That said, though, it’s a very good movie. Depp, with his piercing, icy blue eyes, is chilling as the cold-hearted crime lord with a severely wonky moral compass. Joel Edgerton is fascinating as the FBI agent who slowly gets further and further away from the right side of the law. Jesse Plemons is fantastic as the muscle with the mangled face -- my only complaint is he’s rather prominent in the beginning of the movie and then fades away.

The story, though, is gripping and well-paced -- lean and tight at just a smidge over two hours, when you know they probably could have easily stuffed it with another 30 minutes of murder and mayhem. Solid writing, directing and acting make "Black Mass" one of the more impactful dramas of the year so far.