Entertainment

Film review: The King Of Staten Island a touching if uneven underdog story

Pete Davidson as Scott Carlin in The King Of Staten Island
Pete Davidson as Scott Carlin in The King Of Staten Island

DEDICATED to the memory of actor Pete Davidson's firefighter father, who died on September 11 2001, The King Of Staten Island is a loosely autobiographical comedy drama about mental health, grief and self-destruction.

Director Judd Apatow co-wrote the script with Davidson and one of his best friends, Dave Sirus, adding fictional gloss to a deeply personal story that mines gallows humour from palpable human despair.

The film opens with the troubled lead character intentionally closing his eyes behind the wheel of a speeding car, while driving without a seatbelt on a busy highway.

This heart-stopping scene is inspired by a real-life incident and buckles us tightly, and uncomfortably, to Davidson's manic alter ego as he battles personal demons.

Soul-searching is counterbalanced with potty-mouthed, snarky humour reminiscent of Apatow's earlier work (The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Knocked Up) like when Davidson's drop-out upholds the right to compliment a woman's appearance.

"I just said she looked nice in those pants," he protests. "I didn't know I'd get MeToo-ed for it!"

Tonal gear changes aren't consistently smooth, the 137-minute running time is excessive and the lead character's heartfelt redemptions sometimes feel like crowd-pleasing nods to convention rather than graduated changes in outlook or behaviour.

Seventeen years ago, Scott Carlin (Davidson) lost his firefighter father in a hotel blaze.

Now 24, the pothead struggles to articulate feelings to his ER nurse mother Margie (Marisa Tomei) and younger sister Claire (Maude Apatow), who is poised to leave for college.

Instead, Scott puffs merrily on the pipe dream of opening a tattoo parlour-themed restaurant, oblivious to health and safety concerns about mixing needles and noodles.

In the absence of a strong male figurehead, Scott wrestles with attention deficit disorder, Crohn's disease and dark thoughts in the company of stoner buddies Igor (Moises Arias), Oscar (Ricky Velez) and Richie (Lou Wilson).

They sell pills to local kids and Scott occasionally shares the bed of childhood pal Kelsey (Bel Powley), whom he has known since fourth grade.

"You deserve somebody way better than me," he confesses in a rare moment of clarity.

Margie remains faithful to Stan's memory until she unexpectedly opens her heart to firefighter Ray (Bill Burr).

The arrival of another man in uniform sends Scott into a downward spiral and he resolves to poison Margie and Ray's relationship using ammunition supplied by Ray's embittered ex-wife (Pamela Adlon).

The King Of Staten Island is a touching if uneven underdog story that hits more frequently than it misses.

Davidson is a sympathetic ball of pent-up energy, sparring effectively with Tomei and Burr in their emotionally charged scenes.

London-born Powley sports an impressive accent as one person who truly understands Scott but knows, deep down, the only person who can save him from the inferno is himself.

RATING: 7/10

THE KING OF STATEN ISLAND (15, 137 mins) Comedy/Drama/Romance. Pete Davidson, Marisa Tomei, Bill Burr, Maude Apatow, Bel Powley, Ricky Velez, Moises Arias, Lou Wilson, Pamela Adlon. Director: Judd Apatow

Released: June 12 (streaming and available to download from Amazon Prime Video, Google Play, iTunes, Microsoft Store, PlayStation Store, Sky Store, Virgin Media)