Keanu Reeves stars as Tom Ludlow, a veteran LAPD cop who finds
life difficult to navigate after the death of his wife. When
evidence implicates him in the execution of a fellow officer, he
is forced to go up against the cop culture he's been a part of
his entire career, ultimately leading him to question the
loyalties of everyone around him.
.com
----
Street Kings is a pungent bouquet of corruption, violence,
multi-ethnic mayhem, macho glee laced with macho angst, and
fluorescently obscene dialogue from the mind of James Ellroy. Its
hero, though he'd cely consent to be called one, is L.A.
detective Tom Ludlow (Keanu Reeves), for whom life is a
wound that won't heal and dealing out retribution to scumbags is
the ongoing . Ludlow's the star player--"the tip of the
[expletive] spear"--on a team of detectives headed by Capt. Jack
Wander (Forest Whitaker). Coach Wander relies on his boys to keep
breaking lurid cases, usually through deeply darkside underground
work, and raising his profile with the media and the department.
In pursuit of these goals, nothing is forbidden except failure,
and the truth is what you make it look like. This is familiar
Ellroy territory, most effectively translated to the screen in
L.A. Confidential (which should have won the 1997 O, and
would have if Titanic hadn't launched that year). If you know
Ellroy's ground game, you can pretty much guess where Street
Kings is going, and where it's been. Still, the twists and
torques of its urban road-rage course maintain the centrifugal
force needed to hold us in our seats (a highlight:
refrigerator adapted as rolling barricade), and the movie keeps
bopping us with oddball casting coups: comic Jay Mohr and
Northern Exposure/Sex and the City veteran John Corbett as two
members of Coach Warden's gonzo detective squad; Cedric the
Entertainer doing a nicely nuanced turn as a street creature;
Hugh Laurie doing a less-hyper version of House, if House worked
Internal Affairs.
The problem is that director David Ayer keeps everything
intense. Dialogues are too close-up, line readings are too
strident, the action is too nonstop slam. Recall Curtis Hanson's
L.A. Confidential and the mind's eye summons up a whole spectrum
of existence, mood, place, historical period, emotional
investment; there's an amplitude to the picture and the
sensibility bringing it to us, something besides the whodunit and
the endless rap sheet of nasty what-they-done. Everything in
Street Kings is one-note, and with Keanu Reeves playing it
implosive and Forest Whitaker locked in
crazier-than-an-outhouse-rat mode, that's no way to stay the
course. --Richard T. Jameson
Beyond Steet Kings on DVD
Jumper on DVD ( /gp/product/B00177Y9ZC/ref=d_ap_21_1 )
Shutter on DVD ( /gp/product/B0019X3YX2/ref=d_ap_21_1 )
Untraceable on DVD ( /gp/product/B00151QYXU/ref=d_ap_21_1 )
Stills from Street Kings (Click for larger image)
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