10 Gangster Movies That Mess With Your Brain

By Jack Morrell /

3. Mad Dog Time (1996)

United Artists

A personal favourite, this - also known as Trigger Happy and directed by Larry Bishop, the son of Joey Bishop of the Rat Pack, Mad Dog Time€™s story takes place in a Vegas-style underworld of nightclubs and casinos.

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Mickey Holliday is the absentee boss Vic€™'s enforcer and unofficial hitman, while €˜Brass Balls€™ Ben London has been running the racket without him. You see, Vic€™'s about to be released€ from a mental institution. A rival boss is set to try a hostile takeover, and sends his enforcers to challenge Holliday. They fail, because Mickey is a badass, and because this film sets up duels between mob hitmen where they sit behind ornate desks facing each other. You know, like Edwardian gentlemen used to do it.

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There are power plays and general skulduggery - Holliday has been sleeping with his boss€™ mistress (and her sister) while Vic€™'s been indisposed, while London is only trying to take over his business - but it€™'s these weird little touches that make Mad Dog Time such a peculiar pleasure to watch. That, and the cast (that€™s Billy Idol and Gregory Hines with Kyle MacLachlan and Jeff Goldblum in the above clip), which rivals most Robert Altman flicks€ and the fact that the whole thing apparently takes place in Vic€'™s head.

Yes, this strange, strange film may well be entirely taking place in the addled brainpan of Richard Dreyfuss€™ mob boss, a reality the film keeps alluding to with frequent close-ups of Vic€™s eye, before going all out right at the end to zoom in through the iris, showing a kaleidoscopic starscape with Sinatra playing in the background.

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Does that mean each of the characters represents a part of Vic€™s tortured psyche? Is he making up the whole gentleman€™s duel thing too? Who knows.