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Director : Antoine Fuqua
Producer : Robert F. Newmyer, Jeffrey Silver
Screenwriter : David Ayer
Starring : Denzel Washington, Ethan Hawke, Scott Glenn, Eva Mendes, Charlotte Ayanna, Tom Berenger, Snoop Doggy Dogg
How will the tragic events of September 11, 2001 influence violent movies? The
box office results of Training Day should answer that question. Warner Bros.
did postpone the film’s release date for two weeks, but is that enough time for
audiences to be ready for such a brutally violent movie?
I think so, although this is a time where audiences may seek romantic comedies
over disturbing, awakening dramas. I screened two movies today, this and the
juvenile Max Keeble’s Big Move. The theater was twice as full for Max than
Training Day, which proves that people want uplifting comedies right now. If
you’re one of those people, Training Day is definitely not for you.
Unquestionably convincing, disturbingly realistic, and unflinchingly honest,
Training Day details the events of one day in which a young, rookie narcotics
cop named Jake Hoyt (Ethan Hawke) must show his stuff to veteran detective
Alonzo Harris (Denzel Washington) in order to land the job he wants.
Jake has a loving wife and a beautiful little baby, both safe and sound at
home. By the time Jake returns to them that night, he will be a different
person. He will see things he has never wanted to see, learn things he does
not want to know, and look evil straight in the eye. Although the myth states
when you dance with the devil, you don’t change the devil, the devil changes
you, this experience might actually make Jake a stronger individual, or it
might morally change his standards forever.
Jake will never forget his training day, and this is a day I won’t soon forget,
either. The film explores a world uncompromisingly barbarous, a world I never
want to see again. But it does exist in the vast majority of cities. Training
Day reminds us of that, and sometimes the justice department is no better than
the villainous thugs it patrols.
The film, brilliantly directed by Antoine Fuqua, is fueled with powerhouse
performances. Denzel Washington displays a side of himself we have never seen
before; I feel he has earned an Oscar nomination for his sincere, vicious
portrayal of a man who was not strong enough to withstand his dance. Ethan
Hawke invites the audience to stand inside his cringing shoes. We’re as
startled as Jake because we experience the day through his eyes.
It’s a scary world out there. Training Day shows us the brooding terror that
could exist just blocks away. It’s altogether one of the year’s most
thought-provoking films.
On DVD, you'll find a number of extras, including a spare commentary from Fuqua
(largely expanding on the plot of the film), a few extra scenes, and an
alternate ending that closes just a bit more the story of Alonzo's superiors.
But more than anything, the film stands on its own.
Bartender training day.
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" Extraordinary "
Rating: R, 2001
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