What I appreciated most about Adios Vaya Con Dios was the careful attention to the details with the ensemble of criminals in the film. The movie plays like an artistic documentary following Rory King, played by writer Zachary Laoutides in a typical week inside the Chicago neighborhoods. The story takes an authentic approach and achieves what it set out to accomplish, to make us feel we are always in journey with Rory. At times it's fun being a fly on the wall, being intrigued by the details of crime and the intricate characters Laoutides creates.
Gio Angeli, played by Joseph Mennella, one the few Italians left in the neighborhood that desperately tries to hold grips on a fading dynasty, efforts to flex his muscles while his father is locked up in Jail. Rory's cousin Maurice, played by Michael Hammond, a police officer who is racially mixed like himself, whose corruption runs deep not from his Mexican roots, rather his Irish family. These are just a few of the diverse casts that makes Adios Vaya Con Dios a smart film demanding we pay close attention from the opening scene where Spanish Narration gives us extra intelligence on what Rory King is contemplating as he strains to figure out his exit strategy.
Although we may sense the film can be overly artistic at stretches you need to applaud the artistic choices as the film takes the genre of urban, gangster and Latino and in its place prepares the experience as organic and alternative. It's a dish that works and a tale worth revisiting if the story of an Irish Mexican finds his way back again into the callous mean streets.