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The Long Firm (2004)
BBC America Drama Series - Sundays
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The Long Firm is BBC's latest fiction mini-series to
explore the criminal underworld of 1960s London. Named for a scam involving a dummy
corporation with a dead owner, The Long Firm conjures the gangster-chic world of
the Kray brothers, with their connections in the entertainment industry and the
aristocracy. The top man in this story is Harry Starks, a gay, East End mobster closely
patterned after the most infamous cockney crime lord (and possibly the most infamous gay
one), Ronnie Kray. The acting is consistently excellent, but the stories are both too
unrealistic and too derivative.
Mark Strong is marvelous as Starks: the gangsters brutality, his
charisma, and his desperation to amount to something are all powerfully conveyed. Each
episode is narrated by an acquaintance of Starks who gets pulled deeper into the
gangsters world as the plot unfolds. Starkss effortless charm and his knack
for reading human weakness make the succession of Faustian bargains believable. The
characters open homosexuality is the source of some cliched humor (he secretly loves
Judy Garland), but it also heightens Starkss sense of isolation. Strong makes the
most of scenes where Starkss enemies and even his father call him a "nancy
boy." George Costigan is likewise memorable as Inspector George Mooney, whose web of
protection and kickback schemes makes him a persistently loathsome presence. The mutual
hatred of Starks and Mooney is the catalyst for some of the best dramatic scenes in the
series.
A big problem for The Long Firm is that the shows creative
team also seems to fall under Starkss spell. After the first episode, he becomes far
too much a good guy. In the third installment, Starks obsesses about the murder of one of
his male prostitutes. Suspecting a police cover-up, he engages in some of his own
detective work. The whodunit sequence is suspenseful, but since Starks has already been
seen torturing one of his other rent boys, its difficult to believe that he suddenly
cares so much. Derek Jacobi plays Lord Thursby, a former Conservative MP whose interests
include boys and shady business practices. Thursby comes off as a fop with no self-control
who lurches into evil. Jacobi convincingly portrays the noblemans fumbling weakness,
but as in Starkss case, that characterization seems too charitable in light of
Thursbys darker actions.
Rather than simply offer an impression of Ronnie Kray, Strong makes
Starks a unique character, but the shows writing cuts the other way. Individuals and
events in The Long Firm often come straight from the history of the Kray gang. The
character of Thursby closely resembles the real-life Lord Boothby; the narrator of one
episode is a pretty blonde actress with a criminal husbanda clear reference to
Barbara Windsor of the Carry on . . . films; and there is a Nigerian construction
boondoggle like the one that cost the Kray empire so much money. Such obvious parallels
make the story stale and predictable.
In the end, the social/political eliteor the establishment, as it
was then starting to be calledproves more vile and criminal than the gangsters.
Hardly a revelation, that theme featured prominently in other treatments of 1960s Britain
(such as the film Scandal)
and even during the 60s themselves, in Joe
Orton's plays for example. Familiar scenarios and characters sap the strength of The
Long Firms outstanding dramatic performances.
- Chris Pepus