Wasted Talent (2018) Poster

(2018)

User Reviews

Review this title
23 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
tough to sympathize
ferguson-613 November 2018
Greetings again from the darkness. The first thing to note here is that the title refers to a young actor who scuttled his career through drug addiction - an addiction which ultimately led to a burglary that ended in tragedy and a prison sentence. What the title doesn't refer to is the police officer who was killed by the actor's associate during that attempted burglary. In my opinion, what was wasted was that officer's life, so no matter how talented and charming and rehabilitated one might find Lillo Brancato, my sympathies were with that police officer's family the entire run time ... not a possible squandered Golden Globe.

The goal here is to set aside personal opinion, and evaluate this documentary from director Steve Stanulis on merit. The subject is Lillo Brancato, the young man "discovered" to star alongside Robert De Niro in A BRONX TALE, the 1993 film that was also De Niro's directorial debut. Mr. Stanulis, himself an actor and filmmaker, has a good grasp of the industry and wisely puts Mr. Brancato front and center so he can tell much of his own story. Lillo recalls in great detail the events that led to his being cast in his first movie, and getting to meet Chaz (Palminteri) and "Bob" (De Niro). He was basically plucked off the beach due to his facial similarities to De Niro, and then proceeded to wow the filmmakers with his natural acting ability. He's also very forthcoming about his drug use (a crack pipe in a car), his ongoing commitment to staying clean in the program, and his desire to continue acting.

Other interviews include journalists, Lillo's "super" attorney Joseph Tacopina (a likely documentary subject himself), other actors including Lillo's friend and co-star from "The Sopranos" Drea De Matteo, Lillo's brother, former NBA player Jayson Williams, and even clips from the District Attorney at the time the case was at trial. Director Stanulis also interviews local cops who make it very clear that the police force remain mad at Lillo, and view him as a privileged kid who wasn't held accountable for the death of one of their own. See, Lillo's friend shot Officer Daniel Enchautegui, and Lillo was charged only with the 2005 burglary, while his friend went to prison for murder. So no, the cops don't believe justice was served.

There are some attempts to couch this as a young guy from the neighborhood making it big and not being able to handle fame and money. Once again, it's difficult to muster sympathy for someone in this situation. It does help that Lillo is so direct about staying clean and sober since November 2006, being released from prison in 2013, and resuming his acting in 2015. He also admits to not heeding the advice from either De Niro or James Gandolfini, both who recognized the dangerous path the young man was on. Fortunately for Lillo, his second chance comes at a time when he's still young enough to enjoy. Sadly, there are no second chances for the officer that was killed that day.
23 out of 30 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Couldn't get into it
PsychoBeard6668 March 2021
I wanted to enjoy this but I couldn't sit through it. I found myself losing interest because of the amateurish and poorly edited scenes.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Wasted Talent
IceCream-5712 January 2024
What a mess. This overall story is a mess. A complete mess. I am not here to share my opinion on whether or not he is guilty or not guilty. I would rather review the documentary overall. I thought the story could have been laid out better. It bounces around from A Bronx Tale, to heroin usage, and then recovery. It's all extremely odd the way it flows. And then the documentary is centered around a group of friends, so being former addicts themselves, trying to clear the name of the main subject. I think that's where the documentary goes wrong. It's not enough interesting content about the character to really hold the viewers attention.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Not Good filmmaking at All
Videoguy5715 April 2021
The story of Lilo Brancato is well known to most people. The actors was most famous was his role as Robert Deniro's son in A Bronx Tale. His descent into drug abuse would ruin his career and lead to the death of a NYC police officer. He served over 8 years for Robbery but escaped the more serious charge of murder. His companion was the shooter and while he was a participant in the crime he wasn't charged. This doc directed by a former cop turned film maker and I use that term lightly is terrible. He has no sense of editing ,interviews are way too long. Some of the people you scratch your head trying to figure our what are they doing in this film. Brancato has been trying to restart his career , something I Believe is never going to happen . One of the people interviewed actually states maybe he'll win an academy award one day. Brancato has turned his life around since his release . He attends NA meetings, but he will never be able to live down this crime that led to the death of an off duty police officer. He definitely should have worked with a better group of people to tell his story. The film is amateurish at best. One repeated sequence with Brancato on a couch has some guy off to the right adjusting a camera while sitting on the floor it's all very strange. I'd love to know whet the director was trying to achieve with this. Its worth a look if your interested in the story of Brancato but be warned the film is terrible . Its only redeeming quality is the length which is only 66 minutes. I get a sense in interviews he has given that he doesn't feel responsible for the cops death. Facts are you go to your friends house who always supplied you with drugs. Unknown to you who had died months earlier. You break a window attempting to get in to the apt . The neighbor an off duty cop comes out confronts you both with his gun drawn is shot dead by your buddy and you don't think your responsible .You Certainly Are !!!!!
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
C+
shondarae_9910 March 2019
The description of this documentary claims it is examining temptations and struggles of young celebrities on the rise to fame. Um. It focuses on actor Lillo Brancato exclusively. In a nutshell, it mostly focuses on how he got the part in The Bronx Tale, his drug addiction which led to a cop being murdered and how still today New York cops still hate him. Which is fine because it was an interesting story but after watching the one hour and six minute documentary I googled the story and found out he went to prison for 8 1/2 years and I'm not sure they even told us that part. Maybe it was passively mentioned so I didn't even realize it. Even though I found the documentary interesting and I enjoyed watching it I'm still not entirely sure what it's supposed to be about. Kind of jumped all over the place and just gave me bits and pieces of random information.
12 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Missed the mark ... at least for me.
julian-640-54405812 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
The narrator in the beginning says "this is not a puff piece"....excuse me...it absolutely is. Moreover, it appeared to me to be an ad by a guy trying to get back into the business. It was less a story about what happened, and more an attempt to rebuild the career of someone with talent who was given an incredible, rare opportunity, threw it away and now cleaned up and decided he wants it back.

But this "audition" falls flat.

In a nutshell it is the story of a rich, privileged individual who had everything and CHOOSE to throw it all away, and, as a result of his bad decisions, an innocent off duty cop is dead. What makes it even worse is he escaped punishment for his contribution to the officer's death most likely because of his money and privilege.

If a person is able to come back from drug addiction and stay clean, good for them, but the destruction and damage to innocents left in their wake does not just go away because of their epiphany.

This film seems to suggest otherwise.

I think one of the last people they interviewed really summed up the message of the film when she said (in effect) that we should feel sorry for these rich famous people because we little people have no idea how difficult it is to have everything we could ever want and we cannot possibly understand how boring that is.

As one of the little people I suggest you skip this one.
10 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Wasted talent indeed!
tub5146111 November 2023
Why would this fellow who was warned multiple times, who had the foundation for success in his hands, who listened to two very accomplished actors (yes I mean Mr. Palminteri too not just Mr. De niro) working the entire time with him on the film and this little weasel decides I am going to be a big fat loser who plays with guns and hangs with cop killers and steals someone's stuff for drug money? I can understand why Mr. Palminteri didn't want anything from you, loser. You are a deceitful selfish man and sure you can play the part of a naive young man growing as a person but while you were good onscreen not a damn thing in that movie even what you read in your narration meant anything to you, not one thing. Brother, where is your loyalty?
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Amateurish
MikeO_641 January 2021
Lillo Brancato is a person whose story I am familiar with, and wanted to know a little better. I'm only a half an hour in and already it's going back and forth in time between the crime, and the story of his early life, and how he got the role in "Bronx Tale". There's an interview with a former correspondent with CNN that was not only poorly placed but went on about 5 minutes too long. Also for some strange reason there's a guy who looks like a male model changing the focus on a still camera crouched behind Lilo the whole way through. Extremely odd choice.. obviously a friend or relative of the cop director; it's very off-putting and for whatever reason they constantly include him in the 2-shot every time they show Brancato being interviewed by the director. It's only 67 minutes, but I'm bailing at 43 now.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
And Now I Care Even Less
kermurphy2925 April 2019
I lost interest in about five minutes. I have no idea who these people are except for Lilo Brancato. Why was an ex-NYPD officer doing a documentary about someone involved in the killing of one of his own? I couldn't get past that. I saw this as a publicity push to shine up Brancato's image and that will never happen. To be sure, many people told him as he spiraled out of control that he was wasting his talent but he CHOSE that path anyway. I want no part of his egocentric comeback. Officer Enchautegui will not have that opportunity.

Poorly made, poorly executed, poor choice of subject. I wonder who paid for this?
9 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Tragic story
shanksfilmmaker19 August 2019
Just seen this and living in LA I can so relate. Loved the way they did this documentary, raw and powerful. A must watch, I think a lot of people can learn from his story.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Watching is a bizarre experience
NickGepetto17 June 2019
You would expect a documentary to provide a detailed story on the subject. This one does not. The guy who directed it (I can't call him a director) is a lug of a former NYC cop. He says that he's a former cop and the investors asked him to direct. Why? Does he have any experience except for being a former NYC cop? Is he now a professional filmmaker? There is no indication of this and after you see this think you will definitely say there is no indication of this. Every indication is that he is just a typical weight-lifting, poor communicator, meathead of a NYC cop.

Among the unanswered questions in this thing: What was Lillo convicted of? How many years did he spend in jail? Does he have a girlfriend? Has he even been married? What happened during the crime? Not brief info - WTF happened? What is a list of all the films he has been in? Is he working now? If so, on what? Not well done.
4 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Interesting Story, Yet It's The Most Boring Documentary I Have Ever Seen. Not Lillo's Fault
nlytnd_116 February 2021
I'm a fan of documentaries and I've literally watched thousands including random schmo's on Youtube who have compiled them over a weekend and this may very well be the worst directed/written/compiled documentary that I've ever seen. It's an interesting story, which is nearly impossible to fail at, yet this does. Everything feels forced... it feels like an interview rather than a free flow of information being shared to the camera. For reasons that boggle my mind beyond belief, they show a camera perspective showing the interviewed subjects with the cameras and lights on them. The interviews were already feeling high pressured and forced, so why would they intentionally take the viewer even more out of it by showing the production associated with the subject being interviewed? This would almost be like if you're watching a movie and the movie intentionally shows the stuntmen attached to bungee cords and all the props in the middle of the movie. I realize this is a documentary, but it's still the same idea. This isn't what makes this documentary bad... it's already bad, but this sums it up perfectly.

It tries to be clever by jumping all over the place, but it ends up being a massive cluster of mostly garbage.There was one portion of the doc that I enjoyed and that's when Lillo was telling his story of how he got the part for A Bronx Tale, which is I'm guessing a good 15 minutes or so. The crazy thing is you could tell that Lillo Brancato is an interesting person who could tell a good story, but this doc feels like they filmed it in a pressure situation rather than letting the interview subjects to speak off the cuff and it shows. The good reviews on here must be from people who were intrigued by the story rather than the documentary in of itself. Hopefully the people who put this doc together could either learn from their mistakes or stop doing documentary's all together, because this is really bad... people on Youtube who compile info over a weekend and make a video compile much better content.

Warning not sure if this is a spoiler, this is in reference to the so called burglary, which is public information prior to this documentary, but warning if you don't want to know the story going in even though this barely covers that and does a horrendous job at doing so. Anyways, the situation that landed Lillo beyond bars. His crime was very minimal... misdemeanor-esk at most. His crime was only a so called burglary (but it's a reach to even call what happened a burglary) and in that process a person who he was with, ended up returning fire on an off duty cop and killing him... and since it was a cop, the book gets thrown at Lillo and the person who returned fire. Had it not been a cop, nothing would happened to anyone, but because apparently cops have extra rights then us regular folk, Lilo gets 10 years in prison. Lillo did have self inflicted issues with drugs and had his own personal journey in overcoming those struggles, but did absolutely nothing to land himself in prison in reference to the cop. I can't believe that a situation such as this case can show the special treatment of cops and simply not be ashamed of presenting that so blatantly. Then just the fact that the cop was out of uniform makes all bets off, especially if that person defended themselves by returning fire. Meanwhile Lillo was just in the vicinity when this happened... give me a break!
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Famous persons kills a cop, seeks redemption, feels sorry for himself
shanedougm21 January 2024
Director at the beginning of the film: "it could not under any circumstances be a puff piece". Director proceeds to make a puff piece. The director doesn't even bother to talk to the victim's family. This is a one-sided attempt at redemption. Lillo is a murderer, he should still be in jail. Lillo shows no sympathy for the victim and is only concerned with how his actions have affected his own life. The only remorse he show is for the derailment of his acting career. Calling this a documentary is an insult to all the documentary filmmaker's who actually put in the effort to produce quality films.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Horrible filmmaking
realitycheck4you24 January 2021
It's like the person who made this had never seen a good documentary in their life. Long, boring interviews. Good documentaries are not just talking heads. Couldn't even get halfway through it because it was just so painfully dull.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
God saved him... what a load of bull...
deloudelouvain26 March 2019
Before watching this documentary if anyone would have asked me who Lillo Brancato is I wouldn't be able to answer. Then again I'm not really good in remembering names, and I'm absolutely not interested in celebrity gossip and sorts. But when I saw his face on the screen I remembered him from A Bronx Tale and The Sopranos. But that's about it, never heared about that story where a cop died, couldn't care less if I have to be honest. That aside, this documentary is mostly about Lillo Brancato, about how he became an actor, how he got into drugs and how that lead to that crime. I'm not going to say that there were no interesting parts in this documentary as there were plenty but hearing Lillo Brancato pretending God saved him and that kind of nonsense just had the opposite effect of what I think of this persona now. First I wished he would start acting again, now I couldn't care less if I saw his religious face again on a big screen. He's clearly a bit mentally ill.
5 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Phenomenal Documentary
brianaaceti6 December 2019
I was a big fan of A Bronx Tale and was under the impression this would be a one sided, pro-Lillo Brancato documentary. However, the director did a phenomenal job blending both sides of the story through the eyes of people close to Lillo as well as NYPD who responded to the fatal night. I definitely would recommend this documentary!
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Wasted Talent - * out of *****
unclejeff24 February 2024
This is an extremely poor documentary that pretty much fails on every conceivable level - and this is coming from a person who LOVES documentaries. There is no feeling here of coherence or cohesion - it jumps from one period of time to another apparently assuming that we all are familiar enough with Brancato that we can follow along. I knew nothing about him or his involvement in a police officer's death while a drug addict, so I was lost throughout. Interviews go on forever as if no editor was involved whatsoever. And the interview subjects are very random - they aren't given any backstory, so we're perplexed as to when they knew Brancato or what role they played in his life or if they even ever met him. We do not come to know or particularly like Brancato as a person, the police officers involved come across as vengeful simpletons, and the whole enterprise is simplistic and even occasionally condescending. My late grandma's home movies from the 1990s were better made. - Jeff Marshall,.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Horrible.
daisybasket_378917 February 2024
This, so called, documentary made me livid. It was horrible. I had no idea about this person or story. The description was misleading. The subject person was not a sympathetic subject and had absolutely no remorse. He is a narcissistic loser that was upset that his silver platter had been taken away by his own actions and criminal behavior. Even more confusing was the parade of enablers and sympathizers demanding his career and name be untarnished by his own actions and deeds. Completely confused as to why the very bad non film maker, ex cop was presenting the story and trying to evoke sympathy for him. And even more confused as to why the cameraman was sitting in shot in the corner. I couldn't even discern the crime for half the movie. Horrible film. Horrible subject matter and horrible persons on both side of the camera. I will not support any work by any of them. No credibility.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Sad truth
demiangelo9 December 2020
He was so talented. I absolutely loved A Bronx Tale and I had no idea what he had been through after that. Sad situation to be in, great documentary and well edited. 10 stars
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Nice doc
d-ramseeey5 February 2020
I had no idea who Lillo Brancato is but after watching this wow I feel sorry for him. The struggle is real out here and only the strong survive. A real edgy documentary about a man that had it all. I highly recommend this one.
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Loved It
carlos8864 September 2019
A unique, real story style documentary of Lillo Brancato's life. The documentary includes raw and unfiltered testimonies from not only Lillo's friends and family but also from his enemies and people that surrounded him. A interesting guy with a unique story. An unfortunate wasted talent. Sad to see.
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Wasted Talented indeed
dennisnyc042 December 2020
So sad, what a waste of talent. He's just a long list of those who never made it. Good story though tragic but such is life. Watch it to believe it!
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Life Lesson
mangosteen5526 January 2021
What a documentary. Deep and gut-wrenching honestly. Filmmaker did a great job showing us his world. Good to see they had featured Lilo's family and people that was around him also. Makes it more of an evened out thorough documentary. A must watch!
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed