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Showing posts with label crime thriller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crime thriller. Show all posts

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Brooklyn's Finest : DVD released on July 6, 2010









Brooklyn's Finest follows three NYPD cops, which may be from different places (both geographically and personally), but their lives and the compromises they come every day with the streets of Brooklyn, dovetail to a climax that has the audience on the edge next to each other their seats
. Fuqua has a star cast here, including Richard Gere, a veteran of the COP only a week gathered out of retirement, which can repeatedly surprisingly, Don Cheadle, an undercover officer whose loyalty to the force by his growing loyalty to the groups he infiltrating be affected, and the film true revelation, Ethan Hawke, a young corrupt police officers, whose morality makes the stomach turns when Hawke's performance is nuanced and riveting. Supporting cast members include Wesley Snipes as a badass gangster whom even the police second thoughts about messing with. Other great performances are from Vincent D'Onofrio, whose wooden delivery works here to make his character all the more dangerous, Lili Taylor, and a gorgeous, world-weary Ellen Barkin. The action is propelled along by the great benefits, excellent camera, Fuqua's skillful direction, and the score by Brazilian composer Marcelo Zarvos Moody. If the plot is a little far-fetched, even for a crime drama, which make up more than excellent performance, so that one of Brooklyn's Finest Fuqua's, and certainly Hawke's finest
Best Buy Brooklyn's Finest DVD / Watch Brooklyn's Finest trailer

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 : DVD released on 11/3/2009










1973 John Godey's novel The Taking of Pelham One Two Three has a suspenseful situation safely even bad habits as director Tony Scott can not ruin this latest version of the film. Four gunmen seize a subway train in New York, isolating a car, and threaten to start killing the passengers if a ransom is not paid within the hour. The rescue was a million dollars in the book and also in the solid film in 1974, Joseph Sargent, in which Robert Shaw played the main mercenary kidnappers and Walter Matthau was the snarling traffic cop trying to outsmart him. In 2009, the title has gone digital - The Taking of Pelham 123 - and inflation triggered the selling price to $ 10 million. If Shaw was a threat of steel, John Travolta, opt for manic and blatantly has a blast at the main villain. His opponent, cautiously downplayed by Denzel Washington, has been updated on the status of civil service, but also degraded on suspicion of accepting a bribe. The colors of the dynamics of dialogue between Washington its control, center console and the microphone Travolta biker on the train in neutral.

So far, so reasonably good. But the tactics of the brand continue to receive from any director, good. From the start-go, the images are subject to the useless and irritating stutter effects, speeding-up/slowing-down, free camera movement, and the lodging of dirt or light stained glass sheets between the camera and the People who had seen a clear vision. Added to the 1974 film is set for a wrecked police car and rushed to rescue Scott requires multiple approaches, each occasion of police patrols to take flight Lethal Weapon style. The hostages in the first movie were cleverly individualized, a multicultural group portrait of the city at that time, mid-70s, which are in the process of Scott - and fellow perpetrators of Travolta, among them the wonderful actor Luis Guzmán character - just sign up. On the upside, John Turturro, James Gandolfini shine like two guys who (like the actors themselves) are very good at their jobs, respectively, playing a hostage negotiator and his honor, the mayor. The screenplay by Brian Helgeland (LA Confidential, Mystic River) is working wisely, if formulaically, adding new dimensions to the major and offer his own gloss on the current economic crisis.



View Trailer of The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3