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Mortal Soul

Scorsese and Cage elevate the EKG of the mean streets

"That reminds me of the movies Marty made about New York," stammered Lou Reed somewhere in the mid-'80s. "All those frank and brutal movies that are so brillyunt." It was a clumsy, rhyme-impaired album track ("Doing the Things That We Want To" from New Sensations), but, as has often been the case, Reed's enthusiasm overrode his tone-deafness. A similar vibe penetrates Martin Scorsese's Bringing Out the Dead, which returns the director to his beloved mean streets. Frank and brutal it certainly is, but as a whole it's hardly "brillyunt," more a collection of enthusiastic episodes trussed up with tone-deaf padding. Unlike its looming EKG screen, an indispensable tool in the film, the movie rarely flat-lines, but there are far too many dips between its impressive peaks.

Arquette and Cage generate special chemistry in this film.
Phillip V. Caruso
Arquette and Cage generate special chemistry in this film.

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Rated R.

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Nicolas Cage turns in his most pallid and unhinged performance since Leaving Las Vegas -- or, especially, Vampire's Kiss (he ate a cockroach, remember?) -- as Frank Pierce, a paramedic whose soul is battered nightly on the graveyard shift. Hell's Kitchen (set a few years ago, before Giuliani began polishing the Big Apple) is awash with carnage, and as Frank repeatedly attempts to quit, Captain Barney (Arthur Nascarella) cajoles: "Go and help the people of New York for me -- go and mop them up." As Frank becomes increasingly strung out, Barney's kind offer to fire him "tomorrow" becomes less motivating. Drowning in the morbidity and bleak humor of his profession, the guy desperately seeks a rest.

Three nights and two days with Frank and his partners illustrate just why his seams are unraveling. For starters, he is deeply haunted by the face of Rose (Cynthia Roman), a young woman he failed to save. Add in the widespread circulation of a lethal heroin mix called Red Death, raging gang wars, a crumbling state of general health, a hospital filled far beyond its capacity, and reality and nightmare become indistinguishable. Dante Ferretti's design here makes Calcutta look like Bel Air, and, unlike Patrick Swayze's doctor in City of Joy, Frank isn't parlaying philanthropy into a new lease on life. Occasionally he manages to save someone. More often, he doesn't. Thus, the title.

While Cage gets to spout some darkly hilarious lines with his trademark wide-eyed goofiness ("Why is everything a cardiac arrest? Come on, people!"), he's most engaging when paired with any of the movie's several excellent co-leads. Ving Rhames steals the show as fellow EMS technician Marcus, flashing loads of humanity through a holy roller/Barry White hybrid that would otherwise collapse into caricature. (It's worth the price of admission to watch him "heal" a smack-addled Goth punk by leading all the other bat-cavers in a prayer circle.) John Goodman (reteamed with Cage for the first time since Raising Arizona) is detached and wary as partner Larry, lending contrast to Frank's psychological spiral. Tom Sizemore brings in a disturbing element of racist violence as Tom, a paramedic who has lost the line between medicine and mauling.

Endlessly cruising through scum and filth, Frank is reminiscent of Robert De Niro's Travis Bickle from Taxi Driver a quarter-century ago, but it's satisfying to note that the comparison is fleeting. Frank is not the violent misanthrope dreamed up by Scorsese and scribe Paul Schrader (who adapts Joe Connelly's first novel here), but rather a man struggling, frequently in vain, to bring peace and life to a realm of insanity and death. His sensitivity (or craving for it) is further explored through his tentative relationship with Mary Burke (Patricia Arquette). She's a mousy former skank whose father was revived by Frank (a miracle via Sinatra) only to hover in a coma throughout the movie. Arquette fills Mary with so much sucker-punched hope that when Frank lets down his fake cheer and admits, "It's been bad latelyŠ but it's always been bad," we feel it, too. Their chemistry is deceptively simple and one of the most satisfying elements here.

Several other superb players flesh out the ensemble. Not that we need another ER, but a successful TV series could be built around Mary Beth Hurt's Nurse Constance alone. Weary and overburdened, yet razor-sharp, Constance (with Afemo Omilani's steadfastly self-aware security guard, Griss) holds Mercy Hospital together in the face of utter despair. She's like a robust female Wilbur Larch from The Cider House Rules, chopping up pathos with curt admonishment. ("Correct me if I am mistaken, but did we sell you the cocaine? Did we shove it up your nose?") On the other side of the convalescent path is Cy Coates (Cliff Curtis), a minor drug czar whose good intentions (he runs a little pad he calls the "Oasis") get stomped on just like everybody else's. Curtis, proving himself indispensable as an ethnic character actor (Three Kings, Insider), once again works wonders with a small role. It's a shame that his hussy, Kanita (Sonja Sohn), is also denied a larger part. Singer-actor Marc Anthony also pushes buttons as Noel, a dreadlocked (and frequently bloodied) childhood friend of Mary's who single-handedly symbolizes the wretched state of the neighborhood.

Amazingly these complex turns barely hint at the wealth of material and characterization littered throughout Bringing Out the Dead, so it should be a scintillating entertainment, right? WellŠ sort of. Try schizophrenic. Despite moments of gritty greatness that rival Scorsese's best, the movie is severely hampered by please-everyone syndrome, especially in the editing and choice of music. Rather than running with just Elmer Bernstein's score (schmaltzy echoes of '60s cop shows), the producers have decided to bombard us with a ludicrous stream of poorly juxtaposed rock songs. The pace of the movie is ruined by this fervid, multigenerational marketing scheme. Why not just cut out the dull, redundant bits?

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