Wow, this is one fun mobster flick. It's a backwards cat and mouse game: Matt Damon is a cop who is really working undercover for the mob; while Leonardo DiCaprio is a mobster who is really an undercover cop. And everyone knows that there is a mole in the mob for the cops and a mole in the cops for the mob, and it's a wild race to see who can find the other one first. What a crazy, fun, deadly game.Scorsese may finally win his Best Director Oscar, and were it not for the infinitely more deserving United 93, I would not begrudge it. But it's not the directing that makes this so much fun as much as just the story itself, plus a healthy dose of stellar acting. Damon has shown before that he can carry a film, but this time he proved that he can carry a complicated character through a film packed full of star power and outshine them all. Mark Wahlberg deserves his first Supporting Actor nod as a foul-mouth cop who enjoys his deceptive role more than he should. Alec Baldwin looked like he was restraining constant laughter in a juicy (if small) character. While Nicholson was good in a scene-chewing role, he was a little over-the-top and his mannerisms reminded me too much of The Joker. Finally, there is Leo, who I was told would finally win me over; but alas, Leo just sucks, especially in the beginning as the pouty under-cover recruit whose Boston accent comes and goes as much as Costner's Robin Hood British accent.
Intense, violent, profane, at times confusing, but always entertaining. And often funny - when Leo shoots a guy in the knee to get more information from him, the guy, after about 30 seconds, screams "I thought you were supposed to go into shock! I'm not in shock! It *@^*#!* hurts!" - hysterical. There is also a great scene with cell phones used as part of the hunt. And then the reason why this deserves to win Best Picture (other than the competition being weak)? It has one of the best last 15 minutes of a movie that I can remember - wow, what an ending.



