The Movie Waffler Belfast Film Festival 2024 Review - THE WISE GUY | The Movie Waffler

Belfast Film Festival 2024 Review - THE WISE GUY

The Wise Guy review
A lonely boy discovers an American gangster hiding out in the woods near his Irish town.

Review by Benjamin Poole

Directed by: Sam O'Mahony

Starring: Senan Jennings, Darrell D’Silva, Lisa Dwyer Hogg, Paul Mallon, Joanne Crawford

The Wise Guy poster

Eh, yoo, shut da fok up and listen, ya freakin' mook. Da deal is ders did kid, right, and his mom's stuck raising him alone cos pops left to become a singer - yeh, regular fokkin' Sinatra over here. Usual story: Kid's a loner, gets his ass kicked on the regular in school. His teacher filling his head about God and Jesus and da Holy freakin' Ghost while da other kids be breakin' his balls. His mom's pushed to the fokkin' edge. One thing da kid got going for him is a bunch of old VHS tapes of dose gangster films from back in the day. Ya know da ones, Scarface, The King of New York, the classics; kid can't get enough of 'em. He’'s alright... for a schnook. But imagine the look on his lil face when he comes across a real-life wise guy just hiding out in the woods by his pop's new digs, and what's more this goodfella ends up taking the kid under his wing. Fuggedaboutit!

The Wise Guy review

That's the outline of Sam O'Mahony's poignant feature debut, The Wise Guy, in which Senan Jennings' (superb) Francis, an adolescent old-school gangster movie obsessive, does indeed befriend Darrell D'Silva's unusual mentor in the unlikely surroundings of an Irish woodland. Or does he? The VHS tapes which Francis cherishes used to belong to his estranged dad for one thing, and the titular wise guy conforms to every last cliché within the hyperbolic diegesis of the movies which the tapes preserve; British D'Silva's intonation is an approximation of what you'd expect a Bronx hotdog seller to sound like. Francis is a sensitive kid - he tends to the neglected pot plants of his school, giving rise to his catchphrase "I'm a dendrologist" - and someone in seeming requirement of a male role model.


O'Mahony's film thoughtfully explores how young boys need to look up to older men, and what sort of masculine archetypes they are drawn to. Furthermore, The Wise Guy extends this thesis to incorporate, via Joanne Crawford's well meaning but misguided teacher, the role which religious indoctrination plays in this sort of aspirational thinking. An excuse for why Francis is bullied in school is that his father is an atheist, which gives the playground tribalists ammunition to other him with, and, as the film goes on, Francis configures the wise guy as a Second Coming in a confused bricolage of adult influence.

The Wise Guy review

Thomas McKeown's cinematography is gorgeous: deep colours characterise the interiors, while the woods are rendered as a fantasia hinterland wherein the unlikely duo nurse shrubs and act out tough guy scenarios (with grandiose freeze frames and jump cuts, the "wise guy" bits also pleasingly ape genre cinematic grammar). It is part of the film's narrative dexterity that we are made slowly aware of the difficult and intricate respective situations of Francis' parents, while the kid remains clueless in his (perhaps) delusion. It's a shame that the film has such a fealty to the profanity which characterise gangster films, as, with its coming-of-age themes and adult issues related in such a careful and gentle manner, The Wise Guy would work so well as a film for intelligent children.

The Wise Guy review

In a cultural climate where apparently "masculinity is in crisis" (i.e., male entitlement is increasingly not realised), with a subsequent rise of the most banal, boring and toxic influencers preying on this self-fulfilling insecurity, the concept of inappropriate male role models is both intriguing (I Work With Young People and trust me, it's a problem: a really, really, really fucking tiresome problem) and, despite its retro context, timely. The Wise Guy challenges this rash dynamic, questioning why boys need to look up to other men at all (Francis' father is privy to a different self-deception, while his mother is doing her absolute best while managing an emotional secret of her own). These films which we idolise (the dorm poster of Scarface, any bloke of a certain age telling you that their favourite film is The Godfatherzzzzz) reassure us that existence can be simple, with problems easily solved with a gun and brute strength. That being part of a big boy's club enables us to avoid the difficult complexities of life (a  part of Goodfellas' endless wonder is how perceptively it essays male companionship and insecurity). The Wise Guy, with its bittersweet conclusion, offers no such simple resolutions.

The Wise Guy plays at the 2024 Belfast film Festival on November 9th.



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