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Brooklyn’s Finest Review

Brooklyn's Finest is a clichéd cop film only in setup, not in execution. The scripting and plethora of strong performance elevate the familiar veins that make up the film's structure. In fact, three of the most standard-order plot lines are utilized: an undercover cop who blurs the line between righteous and corrupt, a drug cop who exhibits no blurring in his corruption and an aging veteran slugging it through his last week on the job. These cops are played by Don Cheadle, Ethan Hawk and Richard Gere respectively and each gets equal screen time in a triple-thread story that converges on one fateful night. Director Antoine Fuqua's latest, which hit shelves on DVD and Blu-ray this Tuesday, treads a thin line between tragic and gritty and outright depressing. This is a gloomy film to be sure; everyone is either a cop, murderer, drug dealer or prostitute (sometimes many of the above) and there is no glimpse of sunshine, so to speak, in Fuqua's Brooklyn. I am a big fan of Fuqua, from his John Woo-esquire debut with The Replacement Killers to the classic cop drama Training Day to the very underrated Bruce Willis war actionier Tears of the Sun, he is more than a competent auteur and always brings out solid performances from his leads.bfpic Hawke (who plays the increasingly corrupt Sal) is perhaps the strongest of three leads, but Gere and Cheadle are very convincing in their roles as well. Unfortunately, despite the admirable development of these characters, the ordinary narrative leaves little question about where their respective paths are headed. We also get a blazing comeback from the one and only Wesley Snipes as a criminal and friend of Cheadle's Tango. Rounding off the talented main players are Brian F. O'Byrne as Sal's fellow cop and friend and Will Patton as Tango's lone remaining contact to the just world he feels is fading away. This stellar work from the key players makes Brooklyn's Finest worth your time. The drive behind these three cops is equally compelling. Sal has five kids (with numbers six and seven on the way) and is swimming in debt. Through a real-estate contact he sets up a deal to move his growing family to a larger house, but only if he can get the big score of drug money he needs. As the date approaches for him to come up with the money he grows increasingly desperate. Gere's Eddie is a burnt-out cop who has all but lost respect for the job, and his fellow cops have all but lost respect for him. His only remaining duty is to escort a rookie around for his final seven days but things go far less smoothly then he could have hoped. Finally there is Tango, a UC who has lost all his ties to the real world. His wife is filing for divorce and he wants to be made detective first grade as soon as possible so he can spend the remainder of his days behind a comfortable desk and away from a life of crime. In one of the best sequences, Tango is asked why the sudden urge to get out. He tells of a night where he was pulled over by the cops for speeding and legitimately considered killing them. He wants out. If only the despair had been laid on a little less thick and the stereotypes that make up the three main characters polished with a bit more inventiveness, Brooklyn's Finest could have been a classic in the making. Instead we get only what we would expect: a gritty, bloody and well-acted police actioner. Rating: 7/10 Brooklyn's Finest Directed by Anton Fuqua Written by Michael C. Martin Starring: Ethan Hawke, Richard Gere, Don Cheadle, Wesley Snipes
Rating
7.0

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