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Director : Curtis Hanson
Producer : Curtis Hanson, Arnon Milchan, Michael G. Nathanson
Screenwriter : Curtis Hanson, Brian Helgeland
Starring : Kevin Spacey, Russell Crowe, Guy Pearce, James Cromwell, David Straithairn, Kim Basinger, Danny DeVito
L.A. Confidential, despite what you've heard, is not the best film in 20
years. It's not even the best film of 1997 (current titleholder: In the
Company of Men). But if you consider all films ever made that have the nasal
Danny Devito providing voice-over work, L.A. Confidential is certainly at the
top of that list.
Comparisons to Chinatown are obvious and appropriate. Both films take place in
the Los Angeles of yesteryear, feature multi-layered crime riddles, and have
stars with questionable morals as ersatz heroes. And both are very good.
While Brian Helgeland and Curtis Hanson's script isn't the tight masterpiece
that Chinatown is (the writers meander for a good 45 minutes before his story
starts to shape up), and Faye Dunaway wasn't half the cheeseball that Kim
Basinger is as the femme fatale, L.A. Confidentialmakes the audience do what
few films of the 90s have achieved: think.
And you'll have to. Director Hanson's convoluted plot -- tracing the rise,
fall, and redemption of L.A. cops played by Guy Pearce, Russell Crowe, Kevin
Spacey, and James Cromwell -- is all over the map until its handy, bloody
ending (body count > 25). Even then, you probably won't have all the details
figured out. But at least it's fun to try.
The DVD release features a lot of extras backed by a widescreen presentation of
the film. No commentary track, but two short documentaries and an interactive
guide to the locations used in the film help you figure out what was going on
inside Hanson's head when he put this thing together.
Bad boys.
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" Excellent "
Rating: R, 1997
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