Righteous Kill Movie Review
Righteous Kill Review

"Righteous Kill" Overview

Rating:
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Jon AvnetProducer : Jon Avnet,Boaz Davidson,Randall Emmett,George Furla,Lati Grobman,Avi Lerner,Alexandra Milchan,Daniel M. Rosenberg
Screenwiter : Russell Gewirtz
Starring : Robert De Niro,Al Pacino,Curtis Jackson,Carla Gugino,John Leguizamo,Donnie Wahlberg,Trilby Glover,Alan Rosenberg
Robert De Niro and Al Pacino -- has there ever been a better acting team? For the
first time since 1995's Heat, the two have leading roles in the same film, and their
presence has allowed Righteous Kill to build a substantial amount of buzz. While the
movie doesn't live up to the anticipation, it does pack a decent punch, thanks entirely
to the leading men.
When hard-boiled rapists, pedophiles, murders, and drug lords slip through the legal
system, are people who take the law into their own hands criminals or heroes? Ri
ghteous Kill explores the familiar subject of vigilante killers with a slight twist.
This time, the killer is a cop.
As the movie opens, Detective Turk (De Niro) confesses to killing 14 people during
his time at the NYPD homicide department. He explains that the unjust judicial system
initiated and provoked his gradual spiral into insanity. It began a while back, after
watching a child-killer walk away unpunished. Turk then planted evidence to frame
him for a different crime. Right or wrong, justice was served. His long-time partner,
Rooster (Al Pacino), knew about his actions, but didn't stand in his way.
Of course, Turk would never harm a hair on an innocent civilian's head. He targets
only the city's most heinous scumbags. A cruel pimp. A pedophile priest. A notorious
drug lord. He shoots the criminals at close range, leaving behind little evidence,
only short poems that explain the execution. He continues the killing spree unsuspected
for a while, but it's only a matter of time before his department starts to have
suspicions. But are things as they seem?
First, the bad news: Righteous Kill is lucky to have De Niro and Pacino. Damn lucky,
because it is greatly flawed. The film feels like it was directed by a first-timer
and reeks of amateurism. Jon Avnet is an experienced producer, but he's certainly
not a visionary director. It's only 100 minutes, but Righteous Kill feels much longer
because of choppy, awkward pacing. Not only does this prevent the complex themes
from reaching their thought-provoking potential, but it hinders the chemistry between
De Niro and Pacino, which is the film's best asset. And who cast rapper 50 Cent and put
him in dramatic scenes with two of the greatest actors of our time?
Now the good news: Simply put, Robert De Niro and Al Pacino. They save Righteous
Kill from becoming another run-of-the-mill cop movie. De Niro and Pacino make it impossible
to take your eyes off the screen. These guys do not act; they transform, they be
come the characters, capturing every nuance, every peculiarity. You can see years of
regret and moral surrender in their eyes, and watching their moral transformations
is cinematically priceless. Sure, both could have picked a better movie in which
to reunite, but that doesn't make their pairing any less eventful. Righteous Kill may be forgettabl
e, but their performances are anything but.
He looks like a righteous dude.
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Review by Blake French
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