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METHOD MAN From MMA ass-kicker Tim Sylvia to old Charlestown comrades and actual law enforcers, Hickey's cast was filled with real-life characters. 

NOW SEE THE MOVIE

After more than two years of shuttling his family between hotels under false identities, in September 2009 Hickey returned to Boston to make his movie. He says his work with the US Marshals wrapped on mutual and amicable terms, allowing him to begin his filmmaking career. "It came to a point where I absolutely had to get it done," he says. "Not only did I finally have time, but I realized that, as great as it would have been, I didn't need a huge budget or an A-list actor like Mark Wahlberg, because OxyContin was the only A-list actor that we ever needed."

Since writing Oxy Morons, Hickey had personally spoken with hitters including Sopranos star James Gandolfini, and director Ed Bianchi (The Wire, Deadwood) about potential collaborations. But those meetings all amounted to disappointing lessons, and now it was time to take the roughly $100,000 he'd raised, plus a number of in-kind contributions, and push forward. Friends and community members came through big-time; for a pivotal funeral scene, Hickey was able to use the abandoned St. Catherine's Catholic Church in the Bunker Hill projects. Johnny served as an altar boy there before his drug-addled teenage years, and says his return nearly two decades later was emotional enough to trigger real tears for his on-camera bereavement.

"John always had his gifts — there's no doubt about that," says Father Ronald Coyne. A former priest at St. Catherine's who Hickey regained contact with six years ago, Coyne remembers Johnny as one of many kids from the bricks whose families sought divine intervention. "Of course," he continues, "he also had his struggles, and it took some time for him to put that all together."

I should have known that Hickey had some tricks up his tattooed sleeves, which have been laser-scrubbed and re-inked three times since I've known him (he tells me it was to preserve his secret identity). On the set of Oxy Morons, uniformed and plainclothes cops and corrections officers showed up to consult and even act in the film. Boston Police Department vehicles were on loan for several days; BPD SWAT team members, playing themselves, came dressed in full riot gear. But what really should have tipped me off was that Hickey's 200-person cast and crew was permitted to film — for no charge — at the abandoned Barnstable County Jail on Cape Cod. At the time, I believed that he received such donations because of the movie's anti-drug message. Later, Hickey told me they were also tokens of appreciation for the undercover work he'd done.

Aside from the prison and actual law-enforcement officials who fill various scenes, Oxy Morons is also brimming with Charlestown cameos — both location and actor-wise. For co-stars, Hickey cast two other Bunker Hill veterans who he's been friends with since childhood. David Burns — once a cast member on The Real World: Seattle and now publisher of the Los Angeles Times lifestyle mag Brand X — plays Hickey's brother Jason, and executive produced the film. Burns's father has suffered from heroin addiction for 35 years.

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18 Comments / Add Comment

Kringle

Wow, you're one sick puppy...
What a dirty rat
Posted: February 02 2011 at 3:43 PM

Kimberley Ring

Great job on the story, Chris
Posted: February 02 2011 at 6:21 PM

film-guy-MA.

awesome stuff...looking forward to seeing this!!
Posted: February 02 2011 at 7:13 PM

JohnnyCakes

lol @ Brennan as a "former armored-truck bandit". He stole cars for the bandits, one of which resulted in the death of man. Then, in tandem with his father, ratted on his best friend from childhood a few years into his sentence to get out of jail. But 'former robber' sounds so much better than ' government informant'.
Posted: February 02 2011 at 7:50 PM

ya-i-know

cakes, why is it that people like you want to destroy or turn negative when people turn their lives around. Like it matters what he did in his criminal life, I would argue it's more important what he is doing now. Getting the message out there about a horrible drug is by far more important. You should take anything else up in person with him, that is if you would. Or some advice would stay in that 1 square mile and keep commenting via the computer. And in closing, I find it funny you allege to know so much about this man's life.

Tim
Posted: February 02 2011 at 8:21 PM

Oxymoron

Ya-i-know It is not what you think
Posted: February 02 2011 at 10:50 PM

Oxymoron

Hickey is a total fraud.

He is back on drugs. He is high all the time

He is not from Charlestown.......he got his girlfriend pregnant last year and abandoned her.

It is all a lie and made up stuff.....some true but most not!!!
Posted: February 02 2011 at 10:52 PM

CitizenWhy

Life seems so much more menacing now. When I was a kid I lived across the street from the local heroin distribution apartment (an illiterate couple from the South with with kids) in the South Bronx. The addicts were sad creatures, including some older brothers of friends. They would steal anything, but that was it. No menace. The scariest part of having them as neighbors was finding, in a big empty lot, the occasional dead body of someone who overdosed.
Posted: February 02 2011 at 11:25 PM

Nicholas Oliver

you cant die by injecting air in your veins, as a former heroin addict ive shot syringes with a 1/3 of the thing filled with air and i noticed no reaction as among my other addict friends at the time.
ive been clean for yrs and opiate addiction is the biggest nitemare on earth, it will make u do crazy, desperate shit, like this dude in the story
Posted: February 03 2011 at 6:46 AM

Kristen Haley

Thanks for writing this Chris :) Please visit http://oxymoronsmovie.com for showtimes and to purchase tickets!
Posted: February 03 2011 at 11:07 AM
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