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Posted: 04/17/08
Street Kings (2008) by Keith Miller David Ayers' latest moves closer to true noir. |
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From the opening we meet Detective Tom Ludlow, a veteran Anti-Gang investigator going through the motions as he wakes up [fully clothed] for his shift in the early evening shift. He's on a liquid diet and reinforces that with a few hotel-sized bottles of vodka for his drive down a side street in Korea-town, Los Angeles where meets with two Asian Thugs. "Konichi-wa!" Ludlow greets these men, who waste no time explaining that to Koreans, being addressed in Japanese is offensive. Strike one: Ludlow is insensitive.
During the bad guys-bad cop banter on pricing and etiquette, Detective Ludlow assumes they are both Korean. When politically corrected that one gangster is Filipino while the other is Korean, Reeves delivers one of the sharpest lines I've heard in a while: "I can't tell the difference, how can you? You all have eyes shaped like exclamation points; you dress White; you talk Black; and drive Jewish!" Strike three: Tom Ludlow is a racist. The gangsters dispatch a beat down worthy of righteous indignation even from a pair of sensitive gangsters.
Street King's story structure runs along the scheme of providing a series of set-ups with delayed and rewarding pay-offs. Ludlow is the target of an Internal Affairs investigation actually targeted at his mentor Superior, Captain Jack Wander, played by Forest Whitaker. Capt. Wander heads up a small Detective street team that boasts controversial if not successful arrests. Ludlow's ex-partner, Detective Washington, once dirty but has seen the light has been identified as talking to Internal Affairs. On learning of this Ludlow attempts to confront Washington only to witness and by extension be implicated in his brutal murder by two gangbanging "Monsters" in an apparently staged robbery. Forest Whitaker [Vantage Point, The Last King of Scotland, The Shield] gives a convincing performance as the father-figure-mentor with a hidden agenda. He's more sheep in wolf's clothing with a disarming smile. Keanu Reeves infuses Ludlow with stoic intensity as a man used to being a blunt object weapon now slowly becoming unraveled as he questions not only who but why he's being made to kill. The hip-hop artist Common [Smokin' Aces, Wanted] puts forth a fine, if not frightening, performance of Coates, a serial killing County Sheriff with a bad drug problem. Hugh Laurie does a good turn in a small part as the conflicted Internal Affairs Chief on the heels of Reeve's Ludlow. Chris Evans [Fantastic Four, Sunshine, Nanny Diaries] puts in some time as a reluctant Detective charged with investigating Reeve's character.
Ultimately, at its core Street Kings is strictly paint by numbers urban drama that is elevated by decent acting and a director's passion for the subject matter. Street Kings' script is by James Ellroy, Kurt Wimmer and Jamie Moss from an original story by James Ellroy. Directed by David Ayer. Keith Miller is a writer in New York City.
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