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Dark Blue

DVD Release

  • Release Date: 2003
  • "Internal Affairs": 3 featurettes
  • cc
  • Audio commentary with director Rob Shelton
  • Photo gallery
  • Original theatrical trailer

  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Genre: Crime
  • Movie Type: Police Drama, Crime Drama
  • Themes: Police Corruption, Race Relations
  • Director: Ron Shelton
  • Main Cast: Kurt Russell, Brendan Gleeson, Scott Speedman, Michael Michele, Ving Rhames
  • Release Year: 2003
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 113 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

A cop's personal code of justice begins to change after a number of incidents lead his city to a tragic wave of violence in this police drama. Eldon Perry (Kurt Russell) is a veteran cop with the LAPD's Special Investigations unit, a man who isn't above bending the law if it means putting people behind bars who deserve the treatment. As Los Angeles waits on the verdict in the Rodney King police beating trial, Perry is presenting testimony to Assistant Chief of Police Arthur Holland (Ving Rhames), who is well aware of the corruption in the SIS unit and wants to stop it. Perry, however, twists some facts as he speaks in the defense of his new partner, Bobby Keough (Scott Speedman), who is being investigated for inappropriate use of deadly force. For lack of honest testimony, Keough is let off the hook, and soon he and Perry have a new case to investigate -- a robbery at a liquor store than turned into a quadruple homicide. Perry and Keough quickly track down two likely suspects, Orchard (Kurupt) and Sidwell (Dash Mihok), but Perry is surprised when the head of SIS, Van Meter (Brendan Gleeson), tells him to let Orchard and Sidwell go, and instead points the finger at two ex-cons who should be taken off the street, even though they're innocent of this crime. Perry follows Van Meter's orders, despite Keough's misgivings, but in the wake of the L.A. riots, Perry has a change of heart, and decides to start working with Holland against Van Meter's corrupt methods. In the midst of it all, Perry is trying to hold together his troubled marriage to Sally (Lolita Davidovich), while Keough finds himself romancing a fellow officer, Beth (Michael Michele). Dark Blue was adapted from an original screenplay by noted crime novelist James Ellroy; originally set against the backdrop of the 1965 Watts riots, the story was later updated to 1992. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

This hard-boiled cop flick is mean, nasty, and violent, inspired as it is by the writing of James Ellroy, who penned the story it's based on. It's very much true to Ellroy's gutter-style crime fiction, and that's the film's best quality. The screenplay by David Ayer is very much in keeping with Ellroy's style, perhaps even more so than L.A. Confidential. The film also has plenty of similarities to 2001's Training Day with Denzel Washington. Both films deal with thoroughly corrupt LAPD units. Dark Blue focuses on the Special Investigations Squad (SIS), which killed an incredible amount of bank robbers over a short period of time. The unit's amazing kill rate was never a huge story and was eventually overshadowed by the Rampart Scandal. Dark Blue, like Training Day, also has a seasoned corrupt cop Eldon Perry (Kurt Russell) paired up with an anxious rookie Bobby Keough (Scott Speedman). While Russell does a fine job playing an alcoholic, out-of-control jerk and Brendan Gleeson is good as his completely crooked mentor, Speedman is weak in the good-cop role, as is his love interest, another cop (Michael Michele). Both are TV actors who make Dark Blue feel like a crummy TV cop show when they're together on screen. The story takes place as the Rodney King verdict and L.A. Riots unfold and does a good job of showing the sort of cop culture that led to those events. The riot scene near the end of Dark Blue is quite a spectacle, but the very end of the film is too staged. This doesn't take away, however, from what is surely one of the grittiest cop pictures Hollywood has ever made. ~ Adam Bregman, All Movie Guide

Cast


Lolita Davidovich - Sally Perry; Dash Mihok - Gary Sidwell; Kurupt - Darryl Orchard; Master P - Maniac; Khandi Alexander - Janelle Holland; Jonathan Banks - James Barcomb; Graham Beckel - Peltz; Eloy Casados - Rico; David Doty - Judge Russo; Nigel Gibbs - Pastor Dennis; Dana Lee - Henry Kim; Ted Marcoux - J.R.; Carmen Twillie - Church Choir Singer; William Utay - Sapin; Jim Cody Williams - Suspect; Monalisa Young - Church Choir Singer; Marin Hinkle - Deena Schultz; Alan Davidson - Leon Taggert; Tom Todoroff - Police Dispatcher; Peter Weireter - Swat Leader; Darrell Foster - Sergeant Jakes; Michael Bentt - Officer Clay; Wayne King - Mr. Lewis; Eddie Mui - Lucky 7 Bartender; Giovanni Guichard - Rastas; Jamison Jones - Frank; Gregg Miller - Officer Charlie; John Fadule - Shooting Board Officer; Chapman Russell Way - Eldon Perry III; Jim McChesney - Lefty; Faleolo Alailima - Lucky 7 Bouncer; Kaila Yu - Lucky 7 Dancer; Cheryl Reeves - Nurse; Keith MacKenzie - Interrogation Officer; Victor Prince II - Metro Cop; Heather Hutchins - Stenographer; Dorian Holley - Church Choir Singer; Kudisan Kai - Church Choir Singer; Julius Rizzotti - New Lieutenant; Jordy Oakland - Waitress Tina; Robert Tur - Helicopter Reporter; Eric Spillman - Newscaster

Credit

Beth de Patie - Production Supervisor; Terence Blanchard - Composer (Music Score); David Blocker - Producer; David Blocker - Unit Production Manager; Moritz Borman - Executive Producer; Caldecot Chubb - Producer; Sean Daniel - Producer; Kathryn Morrison - Costume Designer; Paul Seydor - Editor; Ron Shelton - Director; Joel Sill - Executive Music Producer; Dennis Washington - Production Designer; James Jacks - Producer; Nigel Sinclair - Executive Producer; Robert Eber - Sound/Sound Designer; Brad Arensman - Post Production Supervisor; Francine Maisler - Casting; Guy East - Executive Producer; Lance Brown - Sound/Sound Designer; Lance Brown - Supervising Sound Editor; Tom Targownik Taylor - Art Director; Sandra Tomita - Associate Producer; David Smith - Set Designer; Bruce Fortune - Sound/Sound Designer; Bruce Fortune - Supervising Sound Editor; David Ayer - Screenwriter; Barry Peterson - Cinematographer; James Ellroy - Short Story Author; Jerry Jaffe - Location Manager; Michael J. Burmeister - Location Manager; Michele Carmel - Production Coordinator; Eric Fox Hayes - First Assistant Director; Chris "CB" Brown - Visual Effects Supervisor; Marc J. Ventimiglia - Additional Cinematography

Similar Movies

Across 110th Street; Colors; Fort Apache, the Bronx; Internal Affairs; Prince of the City; Q & A; L.A. Confidential; Training Day; L.A.P.D.: To Protect and to Serve; Narc; Stander; Dirty; The Thin Blue Lie; Harsh Times; The Departed; American Gangster
 
 
WordNet: dark-blue
Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The adjective has one meaning:

Meaning #1: having a color similar to that of a clear unclouded sky
  Synonyms: blue, bluish, blueish, light-blue


 
Wikipedia: Dark Blue
For the shade of blue, see Dark blue (color). For the song, see Everything in Transit, the album by Jack's Mannequin.
Dark Blue
Dark_Blue_movie.jpg
Produced by David Blocker,
Caldecot Chubb,
Sean Daniel,
James Jacks
Written by James Ellroy (story),
David Ayer (screenplay)
Starring Kurt Russell,
Scott Speedman,
Michael Michele,
Brendan Gleeson,
Ving Rhames,
and Kaila Yu
Music by Terence Blanchard
Distributed by United Artists (USA)
Universal Studios (Spain)
Release date(s) February 21, 2003
Running time 118 min.
Language English
Budget $15,000,000
IMDb profile

Dark Blue is a 2002 film directed by Ron Shelton.

Cast

Plot

  • Tagline: Sworn to protect / Sworn to serve / Sworn to secrecy.

Set in the Los Angeles Police Department in April 1992, the movie is a thriller that takes place just days before the acquittal of four officers (three white and one Hispanic) in the beating of black motorist Rodney King and the subsequent L.A. riots. In this racially-charged climate, the LAPD's elite Special Investigations Squad (SIS) is assigned a high-profile quadruple homicide. As they work the case, veteran detective Eldon Perry, known for his tough street tactics and fiery temper, tutors SIS rookie Bobby Keough in the grim realities of police intimidation and corruption. Meanwhile, Assistant Chief Arthur Holland believes the SIS to be corrupt and is the only ranking officer in the department willing to stand up to the SIS and their corrupt commander Jack Van Meter. Holland has recently turned down a position as chief of the Cleveland Police Department in order to become Los Angeles' first African American police chief. While navigating through the tumultuous neighborhoods of South Central L.A., Perry and Keough must track down cold-blooded killers and face their own demons, which prove to be more ruthless than the criminals they pursue.

Trivia

External links


 
 

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Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Dark Blue" Read more

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