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Despite his wifes concerns about his
mental stability if he goes back undercover, Tellis teams
up with Oak, whose heavy-handed, and often brutal style, is
difficult for Tellis to handle. Still, somehow the two men
begin to work together, chasing down leads, tracking informants
and finally zeroing in on two primary suspects, drug dealers
Beery (Busta Rhymes) and Steeds (Richard Chevolleau), who
operate out of a grimy Detroit chop shop.
As Oak browbeats Beery and Steeds for a
confession, the true story of how the young officer was killed
slowly comes into focus
and the truth is nothing less
than shocking.
Inspired by a critically acclaimed documentary,
The Thin Blue Line, about an actual slaying of
a Dallas police officer in 1976, writer/director Joe Carnahan
first developed Narc in 1994 as a short film entitled
Gun Point. But the young filmmaker still had a
fascination for the subject and wanted to expand the 30-minute
short into a feature film that could delve deeper into a complicated
murder investigation.
The story just stuck with me, remembers Carnahan.
It had a resonance that I really wanted to go back to,
which is rare for me. In fact, usually I write something and
its out of my system, but in this particular case, I
felt there were things worth mining cinematically.
Expanding Gun Point into Narc
and developing it into a film in which a very dark event slowly
comes to light from different points of view, Carnahan set
his story in the mean streets of Detroit and centered it around
a disgraced police officer who makes his way through the gritty
drug underworld in search of not only the truth about what
happened to the slain officer, but also his own inner truth.
I was just blown away by the script,
says Ray Liotta, who was looking for a quality screenplay
to begin his venture into producing. I loved the way
it leads you in different directions. Its structured
in such a way that it kept me guessing so that I never saw
the end coming.
Liotta adds that he also liked the depth
that Carnahan wrote into each character. Both Tellis
and Oak, are such complicated souls, and actors just dont
come across roles like these very often, says Liotta.
Too many characters are written as either black or white,
but these guys have a lot of underlying gray to them that
makes them more real.
According to Carnahan, none of his characters
are exactly who they appear to be on the surface because people
in real life are holding in a lot of emotions.
Nick Tellis, for example, is a very basic, decent man
at heart, who is very troubled, says Carnahan. Like
all of us at one time or another, he made a mistake, and now
he has to live with it. He becomes a tortured soul, and Jason
Patric portrays him with such an intensity and intelligence
that I feel honored and flattered that he made this character
a part of his body of work. Read
On....
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