You don't need a psychology degree to catch all the Freudian subcurrents in Hollywood
gangster flicks. All those gun barrels getting stuffed down men's throats, all those
big cigars, all that Oedipal conniving to knock off and supplant dominant (god)father
figures. So why not explicitly combine the two themes? Take 70 years of clichés
about Sicilian Mafia culture and Freudian psychoanalysis, stir 'em up, and see what
happens. Ramis, whose directing résumé includes one of the more successful
high-concept comedies in recent years (Groundhog Day) and several others of that
general ilk (Multiplicity, the original National Lampoon's Vacation) was an obvious
-- and smart -- choice to helm this project. His work has a reliable medium-voltage
consistency about it, with periodic spikes and surges into the minor genre-classic
zone. Ramis' breakthroughs have tended to happen when his casts are strongest. This
bodes well for a movie that features wiseguy icon De Niro in a self-parodying lead
role and the reliable, versatile Crystal as his foil. And sure enough, the Crystal-De
Niro chemistry is the best thing about this farcical tale of a powerful mobster named
Paul Vitti who consults a shrink when mysterious anxiety attacks start hampering
his ability to perform routine murders and beatings. I was suckered right in by not
only the clever setup but also Ramis' skill at manipulating stock imagery and characterizations
for his own ends. From the made men's f-word-intensive dialogue to the clam sauce
and opera Muzak at the Mafiosi Italian eateries, every stereotype is rendered with
Kabuki-like precision, the better to savor their incongruity in the let's-talk-about-our-feelings
milieu of clinical psychology. I wouldn't say that Analyze This greatly exceeded
my expectations, though. Too often, screenwriters Ken Lonergan and Peter Tolan seemed
content to harvest easy laughs from the ground directly underneath the concept's
wide canopy. I'd have appreciated a little more willingness to shake the branches
for less obvious jokes. Still, De Niro was hilarious in registering believable gangster
takes on topics such as the Oedipus Complex ("That Freud was one sick fuck!")
and the psychoanalytic method ("I tell you all this stuff and you never say
nothin' but 'how did that make you feel?' I could get jelly to do that for me!").
Crystal, as the hapless shrink getting dragged kicking and screaming into Vitti's
PuzoWorld theme-park realm, is equally deadpan, and equally good at infusing his
role with just enough verisimilitude to keep the broader elements from totally overwhelming
the story. But as enjoyable as it is, it's hard to escape a sense of Analyze This
being the work of competent talents who knew exactly where the good-enough line was
and didn't feel particularly inspired to push far beyond it. And a better definition
of a three-star movie I cannot offer.
--Russell Smith
Full Length Reviews
Analyze This 
Capsule Reviews
Analyze This 
Other Films by Harold Ramis
Multiplicity 
Stuart Saves His Family 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood 
Life 
A Simple Plan 
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