Pubdate: Sun, 30 Sep 2007 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: 2007 The Observer Contact: http://www.observer.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315 Author: Paul Harris WHY DRUG LORD FASCINATES US Narcotics dealer and killer Frank Lucas, the central character of Ridley Scott's new film, joins a long list of anti-heroes that America has taken to its heart. There is little unusual about the stretch of 116th Street between Seventh and Eighth Avenues in the middle of Harlem. It is a busy road, full of pedestrians, and lined by restaurants offering the African and Southern food beloved by Harlem's mostly black residents. But it was on this stretch of now innocuous street that one of America's most notorious drug lords ran an empire that spanned the globe. Sitting in a beat-up old car he nicknamed Nellybelle, Frank Lucas considered this patch of road his fortress in the 1970s. It was from here he would deal narcotics and run his criminal gang, earning himself tens of millions of dollars in the process. Now - three decades later - Harlem and America as a whole are set to revisit the shocking story of one of its most infamous sons. Lucas's tale has been turned into one of the most eagerly awaited movies for years, which will not only reignite debate over America's love-hate relationship with drugs but also might win one of Hollywood's most famous names a long-overdue Oscar for best director. British director Ridley Scott has adapted Lucas's rise and fall from power into a film called American Gangster, starring Denzel Washington as Lucas and Russell Crowe as a cop, Richie Roberts, out to bring him down. Released in early November, the film has already wowed many critics and generated a flood of Oscar buzz. The film casts Lucas as part villain, part hero, a figure of black empowerment who wrested control of the drug trade from the Mafia. The performance of the two leads and the style of the film has already got many observers wondering if American Gangster will finally land Scott an Oscar. Despite directing such classics as Bladerunner, Thelma and Louise, Gladiator and Alien, Scott has never won the award. 'He is one of the great Hollywood directors of all time. The length and breadth of his achievement show that he deserves some kind of reward,' said Professor Toby Miller, a popular culture expert at the University of California at Riverside. Certainly the story of American Gangster provides rich enough material to mine for Hollywood gold. Lucas was born into poverty in rural North Carolina. At an early age he witnessed a relative being brutally murdered by white supremacists in the Ku Klux Klan. He arrived on Harlem's mean streets as a country bumpkin, but through a combination of savvy and brutality quickly rose to the top of the local drug trade. He ended up commanding an international drug ring that notoriously smuggled heroin into America inside the coffins of dead Vietnam veterans. That scam was known as the 'Cadaver Connection'. His operation was so lucrative that Lucas is thought to have at one time banked more than $50m in Cayman Island bank accounts. But his high profile also brought police attention, and Lucas was finally caught and sentenced to 70 years in prison, which was dramatically reduced after he agreed to give evidence against fellow drug dealers. Eventually his testimony resulted in more than 100 convictions of other criminals. His tale was revived in a 2000 New York Magazine article headed 'The Return of Superfly', which chronicled Lucas visiting his old haunts in a much-changed Harlem. But in interpreting Lucas's story, Scott is likely to court controversy as well as Oscars. 'There is an eccentricity to him. There is a sense of Scott that he is a sort of hired gun,' said Dr Chris Sharrett, a film expert at Seton Hall University. That element of cynicism has perhaps shown itself in the film's depiction of Lucas as an anti-hero more than just a straight bad guy. Scott has certainly not shied away from Lucas's brutal side, but he has also included a strong sense of black power in the creation of his drug empire. That means Lucas is likely to join a long list of gangsters and criminals that have been embraced by Americans who love a villain who snubs authority. To the long list of Jesse James, Billy the Kid, Bonnie and Clyde, now add the name of Frank 'Superfly' Lucas. 'There is a huge respect in America for people who operate on the other side of the law and are able to navigate that successfully. Every male adolescent in the country has a poster of Scarface on his bedroom,' said Miller. But, like other mythical anti-heroes, the real life story of Lucas is not as pretty as American Gangster portrays it. In the original New York Magazine story Lucas boasts of killing his enemies and laughs when he describes hiding vast amounts of pure heroin in the coffins of young soldiers. At one point he talks about shooting a rival in the head. 'The boy didn't have no head. The whole shit blowed out,' he boasted to the shocked reporter, Mark Jacobson. That sort of brutal street reality has not prevented other villains from becoming famous. Old West gunslingers like Billy the Kid were little more than psychopaths, and yet have long been warmly embraced into America's national mythology. The same can even be said about many modern musical stars in hip hop and rap. Huge names like 50 Cent and Snoop Dogg have long criminal histories, including dealing crack, that are now effectively a key part of their publicity machines. Indeed American Gangster has already been embraced by top rapper Jay-Z, who is making an album inspired by the movie. He said the movie reminded him of growing up and drug dealing in Brooklyn. But while Scott's film may stir memories of Seventies Harlem, it does not bear much resemblance to the neighbourhood of today. Famed first as a centre of black culture and politics and then as a seedy no-go zone of drugs and crime, Harlem is now one of the most rapidly gentrifying areas of New York. Much of the film was shot there, but production workers had continual problems finding streets that looked sufficiently down-at-heel to be convincing. The loudest noise now on the stretch of 116th Street where Lucas once held court is the jackhammers of builders renovating old brownstone homes. A brand new bank stands at a corner where Lucas once parked Nellybelle. Eric McLendon has lived in Harlem for six years. A former television sportscaster he now works for the high-end real estate company Corcoran. 'I don't think people are going to see that film and think of the Harlem of today. Harlem is going to be one of the best neighbourhoods in New York,' he said. That is no fantasy. When Bill Clinton opened his post-presidential office in Harlem in 2000, it looked like an edgy move. Seven years later, it looks like a typically savvy Clintonian investment. Harlem is now home to boutique shops, fine restaurants and an increasingly white population. Nothing could be further from the gritty version that Lucas knew back in the Seventies. Lucas may have been a real-life villain, but he is very much history. The real-life villains American cinema and popular culture is full of real-life villains who have been turned into heroes. This process has happened despite their often truly brutal careers. Billy the kid Henry McCarty - whose alias was William Bonney aka Billy the Kid - is the most famous western outlaw of all time and has been played on screen many times. In reality some believe he may have been a psychopath. Bonnie and Clyde Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow were lovers and brutal criminals. The lovebirds were immortalised on screen in 1967 by Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway, above. John Dillinger This bank robber was lionised in several films and was the inspiration for Humphrey Bogart's Duke Mantee in The Petrified Forest. The role was so based on Dillinger that Bogart sported the same style of clothes and the same haircut. Jesse James Brad Pitt has been the latest actor to play a sympathetic version of this frontier outlaw. The real James staged several robberies where the innocent and unarmed were killed. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin