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10 Cop and Robber Films |
- Movies that make even repressed
men cry like little girls. The movies where your dry-eyed wife
and girlfriend looks at you and says, "Is something
wrong with you?"
- That old crybaby Scott McCullar
helped out with this list. Thanks and a wave of my tear soaked
sleeve, Scott.
- by Chuck Dixon
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FRENCH CONNECTION (1971)
- Starring Gene Hackman, Roy Scheider,
et al.
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- Synopsis
One of the most influential crime films of all time. William
Friedkin takes a page from French police thrillers and creates
an American masterpiece. Spare, brutal and embued with a feeling
of reality that never seems forced or contrived. This film is
timeless, and while one of the most imitated movies of all time,
and still seems fresh today. Gene Hackman leads a great cast
as a cop obsessed witb catching a French drug smuggler.
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not available currently but you can
ask to be notified when made available
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DIRTY HARRY (1971)
- Starring Clint Eastwood, Andrew
Robinson, et al.
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- Synopsis
- Clint Eastwood's most famous
role next to The Man With No Name. Harry Callahan is a cop who
scoffs at Miranda warnings and plays way outside the book in
his pursuit of justice. He's almost demonic in his portrayal
of a San Francisco homicide detective hunting down a serial killer.
Another incredibly influential film with one of the most quotable
takeaway lines in cinema history.
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MANHUNTER (1986)
- Starring William L. Petersen,
et al.
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- Synopsis
- Michael Mann takes on Thomas
Harris' first Hannibal Lector novel in a stylish film that is
endlessly absorbing. William Friedkin plays a man haunted by
his encounter with Dr Lector but who must enlist the madman in
the search for a vicious serial killer/stalker dubbed the Tooth
Fairy. The cat and mouse between the three characters is astonishing
in its pacing and cleverness. The forensics stuff is fascinating.
One of the few cinema mysteries worth unraveling. There's no
disappointments here. I'm looking forward to the new restored
DVD that puts in the important penultimate scene that was cut
from the theatrical version
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SILENCE OF THE LAMBS
(1991)
- Starring Anthony Hopkins, Jodie
Foster, et
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- Synopsis
- Lector again. But this time
it's Jody Foster who must match wits with him in order to capture
another serial killer. The emphasis is different from the Mann
film and delves more into the horror genre than the other film.
But it's a solid cop film as we see the price to be paid for
hunting madman is to risk madness yourself.

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THE BIG HEAT (1953)
- Starring Glenn Ford, Lee Marvin,
Gloria Grahame, et al.
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- Synopsis
- A great Fritz Lang film. Glenn
Ford is a tough, incorruptible cop who's assigned to bring down
a mob led by sicko Lee Marvin. Another much-copied film. Unflinching
and realistic with pacing like a high speed chase.
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FULL ALERT (1997)
- Directed by Ringo Lam
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- Synopsis
- A Hong Kong product by Ringo
Lam. One hell of a police flick. A brazen and violent heist gang
is in HK to pull down a score. But where? And when? And even
when the cops find out they're helpless to stop it. A terrific
film with lots of heart and no cliched John Woo style shootouts.
There's a sombre theme about the violent life that brings cops
and robbers together and takes its toll on both.
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THE
LAUGHING POLICEMAN
(1)
- Starring Walter Matthau and
Bruce Dern
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- Synopsis
- Walter Matthau and Bruce Dern
are San Francisco homicide detectives investigating a mass murder
aboard a city bus. Dour and insightful. This one packs a punch.
One of the few decent cop flicks to come out in the flurry of
police thrillers churned out after The French Connection. This
one is based on one of the Martin Beck police novels from Sweden/
And it translates well from hedonistic '60s Stockholm to hedonistic
'70s SF.
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- FRENCH CONNECTION 2
- Starring Gene Hackman
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- Synopsis
- One of the few worthy sequels
in cinema. Gene Hackman's Popeye Doyle pursues that French smuggler
to Marseilles. There's a terrific action sequence in a drydock
in a shipyard. The scenes of heroin addiction and its consequences
are nightmarish and as realistic as you'll ever see in a Hollywood
film.
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- not available
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LA CONFIDENTIAL
(1997)
- Starring Kevin Spacey, Russell
Crowe, Kim Basinger, and Danny DeVito
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- Synopsis
- A brilliant adaptation of James
Ellroy's epic police novel of Los Angeles in the 1950s. A massacre
at the Nite Owl Café uncovers a web of corruption that
runs high and low through the seamy and steamy faultlines of
the City of Angels. (talk about mixed metaphors!) The cast is
brilliant. Kevin Spacey actually DIES on screen.
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THE
ONION FIELD (1979)
- Starring John Savage, James
Woods, et al.
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- Synopsis
- Based on Joseph Wambaugh's classic
of American crime and punishment. Two smalltime crooks collide
with two LA cops and the end result made history with the longest
murder trial ever. A study of courage and fear and the depths
of depravity. James Woods is incredible in one of his earliest
roles. Ted Danson and John Savage are equally good. A film that
stays with you LONG after the end credits.
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- ASPHALT
JUNGLE (1950)
- Starring Sterling Hayden, Louis
Calhern, Marilyn Monroe (minor role) et al.
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- Synopsis
A John Huston masterpiece on American crime. Sterling Hayden
is the muscle behind a jewel heist that goes all wrong. The tension
is excrutiating as the heat comes down on the hoods. There's
a sense of loneliness and estrangement in this movie that few
others have ever matched. These characters are true outlaws.
The movie is deep and resonant with new rewards for each viewing.
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THE KILLING (1956)
- Starring Sterling Hayden, Coleen
Gray, et al.
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- Synopsis
- Sterling Hayden leads a heist
again in an early Stanley Kubrick film. This time the target
is a racetrack. And it's not the law that does the hoods in.
It's each other. Loyalties shift and wills weaken and greed takes
hold as the crime implodes in a violent flashpoint. Edge of the
seat stuff.
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THE
GODFATHER (1972)
- Starring Marlon Brando, Al Pacino,
James Caan, Robert DeNiro, Robert Duvall, et al.
- Synopsis
- Not just a crime classic, an
American classic. I can't add much to what's been said about
this movie. Everything about it is near perfection. This et the
gold standard for films about the mafia that has seldom been
equaled.
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not available currently but you can
ask to be notified when made available
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POINT BLANK (1967)
- Starring Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson,
et al.
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- Synopsis
- Lee Marvin's partner and his
woman take his cash and leave him for dead. Big mistake. Lee
hunts them down with a vengeance. Bssed on the first of the fantastic
Parker novels by Richard Stark. (Note: Mel Gibson's 1999 film
PAYBACK was a remake of this film.)
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WHITE
HEAT (1949)
- Starring James Cagney, Virginia
Mayo, et al.
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- Synopsis
- James Cagney in his least favorite
role as Cody Jarrett, a murderous mama's boy on a cross-country
crime spree. The pacing is killer and the direction by Raoul
Walsh is some of his best. A study of the criminal mind that's
still daring today. And the spare dialogue and restrained performances
(by everyone other than Cagney who's at his scene-stealing peak
here) only add to the fun.
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RESERVOIR DOGS
(1992)
- Starring Harvey Keitel, Tim
Roth, Steve Buscemi, Michael Madsen, Christopher Penn, Quentin
Tarantino, et al.
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- Synopsis
- Tarantino's heist film without
the heist. Here the emphasis is on loyalty with Harvey Keitel
trapped in a nightmare scenario following a botched robbery.
He doesn't know who to trust. He's a guy pushed to question his
own code as things go from bad to worse to living hell. Great
dialogue and great characterization.
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- DRUGSTORE
COWBOY (1989)
- Starring Matt Dillon, Kelly
Lynch, et al.
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- Synopsis
- I've met a few hoods in my day.
And I don't mean double parkers or litterbugs. I mean lowlifes.
And this film presents them as they are better than any movie
ever made. Matt Dillon leads a cast of cowardly, stupid, venal
pillheads in a confused journey driven by paranoia and fear.
Part crime drama and part darkest, darkest comedy. This movie
is as close to the real face of American crime as I've ever seen
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- GUN CRAZY (1949)
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- Synopsis
- A 50's noir cheapie and very
influential crime film. A young couple go on a bloody robbery
spree across several states. The guy's obsession with guns is
so Freudian it made even me nervous. Their casual attitude toward
murder and weird attraction for each other is still disturbing.
I can't imagine what people thought back then. Bonnie And Clyde,
Badlands, Thieves Like Us and a whole cellblock full of boy/girl
killer flicks owe their souls to this one.
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- not available
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THE GETAWAY (1972)
- Starring Steve McQueen, Ali
MacGraw, et al.
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- Synopsis
- Not the Alec Baldwin and Kim Basinger remake! Instead,
the one with Steve McQueen and Ali MacGraw from 1972.
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- Sam Peckinpah's chase opus about
a Texas bank robbery that runs sour as Steve McQueen discovers
that what you don't know CAN hurt you. It's a Peckinpah film
so the theme of loyalty and friendship are at the heart of it.
You can also bet there's plenty of shoot-outs. Based on the Jim
Thompson novel of the same name. I only wish the studio had let
Sam keep Thompson's ending.
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GOODFELLAS (1990)
- Starring Robert De Niro, Ray
Liotta, Joe Pesci, et al.
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- Synopsis
- A film that bears watching over
and over again. Martin Scorcese makes a flawless jewel of a movie
based on true events surrounding the mob in New York City. Ray
Liotta, Robert DeNiro and Joe Pesci are born for their roles
as a trio of low level Mafia soldiers. It covers the period when
the Italian mobs began to devolve in the face of federal prosecutions
and their own corruption. Unforgiving, unromantic and violent
with some of the funniest, darkly humorous, scenes ever put on
film. "You think I'm funny?"
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- not available on VHS
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- Chuck
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