Alex Kearney, un jeune flic, est muté à Downtown, un quartier mal famé de Philadelphie. Là, il fait équipe avec Dennis - les deux hommes vont devoir apprendre à se connaître s'ils veulent ar... Tout lireAlex Kearney, un jeune flic, est muté à Downtown, un quartier mal famé de Philadelphie. Là, il fait équipe avec Dennis - les deux hommes vont devoir apprendre à se connaître s'ils veulent arrêter le meurtrier de l'ancien coéquipier d'Alex.Alex Kearney, un jeune flic, est muté à Downtown, un quartier mal famé de Philadelphie. Là, il fait équipe avec Dennis - les deux hommes vont devoir apprendre à se connaître s'ils veulent arrêter le meurtrier de l'ancien coéquipier d'Alex.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Inspector Ben Glass
- (as Frank McCarthy)
Avis à la une
"See I have this problem with authority".
It's churlish to suggest that Downtown is merely a cash in of the buddy buddy inter racial cop movies, that, as we know, were made viable entertainment fare by the likes of Lethal Weapon and Beverly Hills Cop. Starring Forest Whitaker (Dennis Curren) and Anthony Edwards (Alex Kearney), Downtown is as much about a fish out of water scenario than it is polar opposite cops working together. With both things dovetailing together to create an engaging actioner that's worth the time of those who are stuck for something light to watch.
Suffering a touch in the last finale due to an inevitable mawkish character strand, some minor irks stop this from reaching greater heights, chiefly that David Clennon's barely grumpy villain is just not strong enough for some dramatic heft. However, there's some genuinely funny scenes between Edwards and Whitaker, the action set-pieces are well staged and thus Downtown gets most of the genre's requisites right. Nice support comes from Joe Pantoliano as a bizarre looking hit-man and Penelope Ann Miller as Kearney's fraught girlfriend, Lori Mitchell. 6.5/10
The film included shooting scenes, car chase scenes, and a bit of comedy splashed in for good measure.Forest Whitaker played a fairly good part and is a decent actor, the problem with films these day is that 90% of them are swarming with new/fresh from drama school teens, we need to hang on to our good actors.
overall, a good cop flick worth the 90 min. - 7/10
It's not really a cop movie. Yes, the scumbags are dealing dope and killing cops, but this is about a black cop that lost his partner (Forest Whitaker) and a fish out of water - a white cop in the worst precinct in the inner city (Anthony Edwards). One is afraid of losing another partner, and the other just wants to learn how to do real police work.
It's funny, it's tender, it's sickly sweet at times, but it is really a good story about relationships; not only between cop partners, but between the wives and their husbands.
Give it a chance.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe film has often been considered as being one of the knock-offs of 'Lethal Weapon' (1987).
- GaffesWhen Alex says "Get off here!" at the exit for the Bryn Meyer Suburbs, they are definitely on a major multiple lane highway, but when Dennis takes the exit, it shows them on a side road.
- Citations
Henry Coleman: A fuck-up. Another goddamn, four-star, class-A fuck-up! Every backward candy-ass shit-for-brains fuck-up in the city, I get 'em. Not Wynnefield, not South Philly, not Germantown, me!
- ConnexionsReferenced in Les fous de la pub (1990)
- Bandes originalesDowntown
Written by Def Jef, Matt Dike and Michael Ross (as Mike Ross)
Produced by Matt Dike and Michael Ross (as Mike Ross)
Performed by Def Jef
Courtesy of Delicious Vinyl Records
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Downtown?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 10 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 2 346 150 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 821 626 $US
- 14 janv. 1990
- Montant brut mondial
- 2 346 150 $US