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| Original Title |
Hollywood Homicide |
| Director |
Ron Shelton |
| Genre |
Action, Comedy, Thriller |
| Released |
2003-06-10 |
| MPAA Rating |
Rated PG-13 for violence, sexual situations and language. |
| Rated |
5.2 |
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| When not solving murders in Tinseltown, Detective Joe Gavilan and his rookie partner Kasey Calden both moonlight in other fields: Gavilan sells real estate (poorly), and Calden aspires to become an actor (Brando, namely). Assigned to the vicious in-club slaying of a promising young rap act, the two detective delve into the recording industry where they hope to find answers - ideally ones that also come with property buyers or auditions. |
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| Harrison Ford as Joe Gavilan , Josh Hartnett as K.C. Calden , Lena Olin as Ruby , Bruce Greenwood as Lt. Bennie Macko , Isaiah Washington as Antoine Sartain , Lolita Davidovich as Cleo Ricard , Keith David as Leon , Master P as Julius Armas , Dwight Yoakam as Leroy Wasley , Martin Landau as Jerry Duran , Lou Diamond Phillips as Wanda , Gladys Knight as Olivia Robidoux , Meredith Scott Lynn as I.A. Detective Jackson , Tom Todoroff as I.A. Detective Zino , James MacDonald as Danny Broome |
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Entertaining, but only slightly...
Hollywood Homicide
Hardened and wizened Joe Gavilan (Harrison Ford) and his young, pensive
partner, K.C. Calden (Josh Hartnett), are two detectives working the
Hollywood beat. Since neither is able to keep up with his bills, they take
second jobs, with Gavilan an unlucky real estate agent, and Calden a yoga
instructor. The duo is called in to investigate the murder of an
up-and-coming rap group, which has left behind a wealth of clues and dead
bodies. As the team works their way through the case, the real drama unfolds
as Gavilan tries greatly to unload a substandard property on whomever he
comes into contact with (including suspects), and Calden prepares for his
theater debut, hoping to become a Hollywood star.
A better title for `Hollywood Homicide' would be `Kitchen Sink,' as
writer/director Ron Shelton (`Bull Durham,' `Play It To The Bone`) has
thrown just about everything into his film but said title. After digging
deep into the corrupt ways of the L.A.P.D. with his February release, `Dark
Blue,' Shelton has lightened up quite a bit, and now focuses on the comedic
side of law enforcement with `Homicide.' The film is all over the map,
weaving elements of clichéd, worn-out detective drama, romantic
relationships, rugged cop action, a revenge story, and broad comedy into one
single mix. This doesn't make for the most cohesive film ever made, but
Shelton's attempt to rouse the silver screen cop drama from its recent deep
sleep hits slightly more than it misses.
Having said that, I should note that the opening section of `Homicide'
doesn't give the viewer any indication that the film will amount to anything
even a little bit recommendable. Because Shelton is taking on such a heavy
load with his convoluted story (co-written by former L.A.P.D. officer Robert
Souza), the picture often leaves the audience behind. The core drama is
centered around the rap group murders, with Shelton having Gavilan and
Calden slinking around Hollywood gathering names and clues. But whenever
this plot thread begins to gather steam, it's sidestepped for action,
comedy, or whatever Shelton wanted on that day of filming. This can make for
a frustrating, uneven filmgoing experience. The film does feature fine
writing when it focuses on the detectives' private lives, or their
interaction with the outside world, but it's only when Shelton finds some
confidence late in the game to take the film down sillier avenues (including
a foot chase in a duck pond with rapper Kurupt, and Gavilan trying without
results to commandeer vehicles on Hollywood Boulevard) that the picture
finally comes alive.
Now I understand Harrison Ford is an actor like any other, but I've always
found it so odd when he attempts comedy. It's like watching a walrus use
utensils to eat. `Homicide' is one of Ford's more obvious comedic
performances, and he's very game to go anywhere Shelton takes the narrative.
Ford's interplay with Hartnett is also surprising, and the two seem a
natural pair even with the difference in age and acting styles between them.
Ford brings out the best in the normally sleepy Hartnett, and most of their
moments of comedy aren't as career-ending as they might seem. Shelton
peppers the cast with a laundry list of celebrities drawn from the music and
movie world, including Eric Idle, Lolita Davidovich (Shelton's wife), Master
P, Martin Landau, Lena Olin (looking as stunning as ever), K.D. Aubert, Lou
Diamond Phillips, Bruce Greenwood, Gladys Knight, Smokey Robinson, Dre (from
the group Outkast), and recurrent film slime ball/country singer Dwight
Yoakam as a shady cop. It makes the picture much more interesting to have
all these faces running through the frame, but Ford and Hartnett are the
anchors, and they do a fine job as buddy cops.
Unfortunately for the audience, and the film's overall integrity, Shelton
has been forced to cut his film down for PG-13 standards. I'm sure the
reasoning is to release a film that Hartnett's core audience (teen girls)
can get into easily, but this goes directly against Shelton's hard-boiled
vision for the picture. You can tell pretty easily where the film leads into
more explicit realms of sex, violence, and cursing, as each time these
situations are presented, the film cuts away rather awkwardly. The version
presented here is still tough enough to push the safer rating to the limits,
but Shelton has been severely compromised by the financial assumptions of
the industry, and his film is diminished because of it.
Thankfully, `Hollywood Homicide' still has enough verve left in it to make
the ride an entertaining one. My advice would be to bring a legal pad with
you to figure out the mystery, but the action and comedy will do most of the
work for you. ----- 6/10
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