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Street Kings (2008) Certificate 15

Street Kings
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Rated 3.5 stars
Average rating
(67%)
 
Starring: Jay Mohr | Antonio 'King Tone' Fernandez | Forest Whitaker | Terry Crews | Keanu Reeves | Naomie Harris | The Game | Cedric the Entertainer | Chris Evans | Common | John Corbett | Hugh Laurie
Director: David Ayer, Jon Alpert
Studio: 20TH CENTURY FOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 104 mins
Genres: Audio Descriptive | Drama | Thriller
Languages: English, English Audio Description
Released: September 15, 2008

David Ayer, who wrote TRAINING DAY, gives us another unflinching look at disillusionment and questionable decision-making within the ranks of the LAPD. Ayer's second directorial effort tells the story of burnt-out Tom Ludlow (Keanu Reeves), a functioning alcoholic and undisciplined detective with the Special Vice Unit. While so much of this characterisation appears resonatingly familiar at first, we soon learn that the character here has been tweaked. While this loose cannon in no way does things by the book, he is also far from playing by his own rules. Ludlow is relied upon by the other detectives in the unit, and by their almost maniacally ambitious Captain Wander (Forest Whitaker), to go outside the law whenever needed. The infractions he is pressured to commit are quickly and uncomplainingly covered up by Captain Wander, while Ludlow and the rest of Special Vice receive accolades for their high clearance rate. Not until one of these cover-ups leads to the brutal murder of his ex-partner (Terry Crews) does Ludlow try to dispel the apathy (and the vodka fumes) clouding his purpose. This procedural melodrama is almost completely internalized within the LAPD, as Vice cops investigate Narcotics cops, who snitch on Homicide cops, and no one talks to Internal Affairs, etc. Crimes are staged, executed, and pinned firmly on suspects with alarming efficiency as the necessary DNA, murder weapons, and fingerprints are then sprinkled around the scenes after the fact.
A study in familiar elements slightly skewed, STREET KINGS provides a satisfying dose of bright, loud, violent police work blended with the right amount of discreetly passed interoffice envelopes to keep the taut intrigue in step with the body count. Little time is wasted on exposition, and the audience's ability to extrapolate is given a great deal of credit as Ludlow's dead wife, substance abuse, and past career troubles are flashed at us briefly, then put away in favour of the crisis at hand.

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Rating of 2 stars out of 5
Time Out

What happens when one of Americas finest living writers teams up with one of its most laughable? James Ellroys...

Highest rated reviews

45 out of 48 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 1.0 stars
Street Kings

AlbanianGirl from , 21st August, 2008

Not for me, I'm afraid. Fell asleep. Didn't enjoy it at all.

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16 out of 16 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 2.0 stars
Street Kings

Wynter from , 8th September, 2008

Following the loose trilogy of L.A. Confidential, Dark Blue and Training Day it was hard not to get excited about David Ayer and James Ellroy’s involvement in another muscular film about the cops that prowl the streets of Los Angeles, especially when that film contains Forest Whitaker. Unfortunately, this excitement was misplaced as Street Kings proves to be an utterly predictable trudge through what has come before, which is a shame because the individual parts are of a very high quality. The dialogue is as lean as you could hope for and even Keanu Reeves is competent enough (although in fairness he is out played by Whitaker, Chris Evans, Hugh Laurie and just about everyone else that walks past the camera). The issue here is the plot. Within five minutes you know exactly what is going on and are then subjected to another 100 minutes of Reeves’ (like, erm, totally) bad-ass cop playing catch up. The tedium is just plain… erm… well… tedious and there really is nothing else to say about it…

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10 out of 10 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 3.0 stars
Watchable entertaining film

A Customer from london, 18th September, 2008

Street Kings reminds me of 'LA Confidential' and 'Training day'. It was gritty and exciting in places. I thought Keanu Reeves was good and convincing, although i still see him as 'Neo'. Forest Whitaker was Forest Whitaker, on the edge of perfect. The ending was a surprise to me. I have no idea why directors/producers keep miss-casting rapper Common, he is not an actor. The film is laced with corruption, betrayal and revenge. I think this is a perfect film for a friday or saturday night in.

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4 out of 5 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 1.0 stars
Not very good

m4rc from , 13th October, 2008

This film contains some of the worst dialogue I have ever heard in a film! Whoever wrote this script should be ashamed of themselves.

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Most recent reviews

Rated 1.0 stars
Street Kings

NJBWOM from , 5th March, 2010

boring and predictable, disjointed and swear word s for no reason. ending was poor having suffered 100 mins of action. Had high hopes with cast but was disappointed. Keanu Reeves must be ashamed of this!

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Rated 4.0 stars
Gritty

keeno76 from from Durham, 21st February, 2010

Great movie. Well worth a watch. Reeves is on top form

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Rated 5.0 stars
LOVED IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

BEEE from , 13th February, 2010

IF YOU LOVE ACTION,GUN SHOOTING, GOOD N BAD GUYS,THEN THIS IS FOR YOU.MR REEVES IS BACK AT HIS BEST,SOME SAY THIS IS HIS BEST FILM SINCE MATRIX AND I MUST AGREE.LISTEN TO ME OR THE OTHER REVIEWERS THAT HAVE TAKEN THE TIME TO REVIEW,BUT WHAT I MUST SAY IS GIVE IT A TRY AND MAKE YOUR OWN MIND UP,YOU WON'T REGRET IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Rated 0.0 stars
disappointment

itsme2 from , 10th February, 2010

Starts poorly and gets worse through out then thankfully ends - we decided to play spot the celeb before 10 minutes of the film had elapsed ..... why would so many well known actors do such a poor poor film?

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