Movie review | 'Motherless Brooklyn’ a sturdy, wordy whodunit

Movie review | 'Motherless Brooklyn’ a sturdy, wordy whodunit


Motherless Brooklyn




Edward Norton gives an authentic performance in a film that also features Alec Baldwin and Bruce Willis.
Edward Norton spent 20 years working to get his adaptation of Jonathan Lethem’s 1999 novel “Motherless Brooklyn” to the screen, adding a few substantial, challenging and chewy elements to the oddball detective tale along the way. 
In the age of blockbuster superhero entertainment vs. micro-budget indie films, Norton has delivered a movie of another era: a sturdy, wordy politically minded and wholly engaging whodunit.
About that era: Norton transposed the time period of the novel from 1999 to 1957. It’s a New York City of private eyes careening around the boroughs in heavy cars, Harlem jazz clubs and racial strife roiled by a housing crisis as a modern New York springs up under the hand of Moses Randolph (Alec Baldwin), an avatar for Robert Moses, the “master builder” of the city. It’s an ambitious adaptation that expands the story, weaving a largely unknown history of Moses and his influence on the city into the story of Lionel Essrog (Norton), a Brooklyn gumshoe detective with Tourette’s syndrome.
It takes a beat to fall into step with the rhythm of “Motherless Brooklyn,” punctuated by Lionel’s twitches, obsessive habits, and verbal outbursts. Although he apologizes for it often, Lionel’s Tourette’s is in many ways his superpower. His quirky behavior renders him non-threatening during investigations. And he’s quick on his feet, mentally and physically. But Lionel also has a near-perfect echoic memory for words and voices, details and clues erupting in involuntary bursts of sing-songy rhymes that serve, in part, as mnemonic devices.
Lionel was scooped up out of an orphanage by Frank Minna (Bruce Willis), and now he’s one of “Minna’s Boys,” aiding the war vet in his private investigation business. When Frank is whacked during a meeting with a mysterious group of men, Lionel becomes hellbent on solving Frank’s murder, plunging into the unknown territory of New York politics, full of class and racial strife as black neighborhoods are condemned and razed for development under Randolph’s all-powerful hand.
The snappy investigative procedural is a pleasure to watch unfold, especially with the offbeat detective at the center. Norton’s performance could be cartoonish, but he executes it with aplomb, the twitches, and tics motivated and authentic to the character and his experience of the world. Seen through Lionel’s eyes, the perspective is deeply empathetic, but in some ways, myopic. He wants to do the right thing for the people that he cares about, like Frank, and his new friend Laura (Gugu Mbatha-Raw), a young aide to a city official tackling the housing crisis. But that’s about as far as Lionel’s humanitarian streak goes.
It seems a bit strange that Norton would insert the Moses story and engage with the city’s dark history of development without saying much more than a vague condemnation at the idea of “power” and the morally corrupt nature of people who seek it. This is a solid and enjoyable mystery flick, but through all the twists, turns, tics and twitches, what comes out is ultimately somewhat hollow.

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