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IMDbPro

Flics sans scrupules

Original title: Gang Related
  • 1997
  • R
  • 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Tupac Shakur and Jim Belushi in Flics sans scrupules (1997)
Home Video Trailer from Orion Pictures
Play trailer0:33
1 Video
49 Photos
Cop DramaGangsterPolice ProceduralActionCrimeDramaRomanceThriller

After murdering an undercover DEA agent, two corrupt cops scramble to cover up what they've done.After murdering an undercover DEA agent, two corrupt cops scramble to cover up what they've done.After murdering an undercover DEA agent, two corrupt cops scramble to cover up what they've done.

  • Director
    • Jim Kouf
  • Writer
    • Jim Kouf
  • Stars
    • Jim Belushi
    • Tupac Shakur
    • Lela Rochon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jim Kouf
    • Writer
      • Jim Kouf
    • Stars
      • Jim Belushi
      • Tupac Shakur
      • Lela Rochon
    • 47User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
    • 49Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Gang Related
    Trailer 0:33
    Gang Related

    Photos49

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    Top cast60

    Edit
    Jim Belushi
    Jim Belushi
    • Det. Frank Divinci
    • (as James Belushi)
    Tupac Shakur
    Tupac Shakur
    • Det. Rodriguez
    Lela Rochon
    Lela Rochon
    • Cynthia Webb
    Dennis Quaid
    Dennis Quaid
    • Joe Doe…
    James Earl Jones
    James Earl Jones
    • Arthur Baylor
    David Paymer
    David Paymer
    • Elliot Goff
    Wendy Crewson
    Wendy Crewson
    • Helen Eden
    Gary Cole
    Gary Cole
    • Richard Simms
    Terrence 'T.C.' Carson
    Terrence 'T.C.' Carson
    • Manny Landrew
    Brad Greenquist
    Brad Greenquist
    • Richard Stein
    James Handy
    James Handy
    • Capt. Henderson
    Kool Moe Dee
    Kool Moe Dee
    • Lionel Hudd
    Victor Love
    Victor Love
    • Hooper
    Robert LaSardo
    Robert LaSardo
    • Sarkasian
    Perry Anzilotti
    Perry Anzilotti
    • Vic
    Gregory Scott Cummins
    Gregory Scott Cummins
    • Clyde David Dunner
    Tom Lister Jr.
    Tom Lister Jr.
    • Cutlass Supreme
    • (as Tommy 'Tiny' Lister)
    Thomas Mills
    Thomas Mills
    • Patrolman Mahomey
    • Director
      • Jim Kouf
    • Writer
      • Jim Kouf
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    6.410.7K
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    Featured reviews

    6SnoopyStyle

    nice work from Tupac

    Corrupt cops Frank Divinci (James Belushi) and Rodriguez (Tupac Shakur) kill a drug dealer to rob him with stripper Cynthia Webb (Lela Rochon). Rodriguez owes a large gambling debt to a loan shark. Divinci and Rodriguez are assigned to investigate the murder of the drug dealer who turns out to be an undercover DEA agent. They frame a homeless man (Dennis Quaid) for the crime. The cover-up becomes more and more complicated.

    This is an interesting little crime drama. The Dunner trial should be extended because that provides some of the tension. He gets off and is never heard from again. The various story threads should combine and cross until the whole thing blows up at the climax. Belushi does bombastic but he needs more desperation. Tupac is pretty good and shows that he could have been an interesting actor if he lived.
    9NBK-2

    Great film

    I really didn't want to rent this film, but one of my friends, PA(nick-name)who was a big fan of Tupac Shakur talked me into it. I am glad he did, because this was one of the best films of 1998. James Belushi was great in this film, and so was Shakur and Lela Rochon. James Earl Jones appears in a little role in the last 40 minutes of the film.He was great, too. However, the film is about two corrupt cops who sell drugs, then they kill

    the buyer and steal the drugs and everything else of value on him. It had worked 10 times. But unfortunately the 11th time(The one we saw) goes wrong.The buyer was a undercover-cop and they has been set to do the investigation.Now the film really starts. The two cops now start looking for someone to blame, and a

    homeless man named Tom looks like an easy target. The rest you can see for yourself.You really should. The movie is Great

    I gave it 9/10!
    7view_and_review

    Tupac Steps Up His Game

    I'm surprised that I actually liked this movie. Tupac made some good music, but his acting left a lot to be desired. I didn't like "Juice" or "Above the Rim" and I simply tolerated "Poetic Justice." "Gang Related" showed a maturation. I'm not ready to hand Tupac the Oscar, but it was refreshing to see him in a role other than a mere thug.

    As for Jim Belushi: he's not high on my list of quality actors either.

    Belushi and Tupac play two cops: Frank Divinci and Rodriguez. The movie begins with them killing a guy they just sold drugs to. It was a ruse they set up in order to rob drug dealers. Their plan was to simply brand the murder gang related and be done with it--no one cares about drug dealers and gang bangers anyway right? Well, it turns out that the suspected drug dealer was a DEA agent and the case wasn't going to be so easily dismissed. Now Divinci and Rodriguez needed a patsy to pin the murder on. Divinci thought he hit the jackpot when he found a homeless man (Dennis Quaid) outside his girlfriend's house. He could pin the rap on him, get his GF, Cynthia Watt (Lela Rochon), to be a witness and everything would be OK, right? Wrong!

    This tale of police corruption in an anonymous metropolitan city got on one track and didn't fall off. It remained consistent and committed to the plot it latched onto. The two main characters, while corrupt and deserving of any ill-fate that came their way, were still somewhat likeable. A tiny part of me wanted to see the two of them escape their perilous predicament. The movie wasn't incredibly suspenseful, but it was intriguing and able to hold my attention which is much better than a lot of movies.
    7Movie-12

    Surprisingly effective film--gritty style and violent content are appropriate here. *** out of ***

    GANG RELATED (1997) ***

    Starring: James Belushi, Tupac Shakur, Lela Rochon, Dennis Quaid, James Earl Jones, and David Paymer Written and directed by: Jim Kouf Running Time: 106 minutes Rated R (for strong pervasive language, violence, sexual situations, and some nudity)

    By Blake French:

    My expectations for "Gang Related" weren't exactly peak high when I decided to screen it. The production just didn't look like anything new to be added into the gritty undercover street cop genre. I was wrong, and the film is somewhat original. I liked the film and its gritty ghetto style it is shot in. I recommend it to those of you looking for a violence action picture with an attitude.

    The film's setup begins a little week, but then triggers a series of unpredictable events that connect to each other in a distributive fashion. The two main characters are FBI agents Divinci (James Belushi), and Rodriguez (Tupac Shakur). They are corrupt cops, taking the law into their own hands in many cases, sometimes resulting in murder. One night, Divinci and Rodriguez undercover a drug bust that ends in them shooting the seeming criminal dead. As it turns out, the so called drug lord was actually an undercover cop.

    The movie's intentions are clear from the first act; we are watching a story from the bad guys point of view. It is an unconventional idea. The opening contains to little dramatic material to go much anywhere, so the rest of the film much hinge of from it. We meet two characters, receive some development that explains to us these are down on their luck, profane, unrighteous individuals, and are then propelled into the rest of the plot, which basically details the complications of the villain's bad choices.

    Once Divinci and Rodriguez learn the identity of the man they brutally killed, they panic. Their first intentions. Since they are the cops assigned to this high pressure case, that they will need to come up with a either a criminal suspect who will plead guilty to their dastardly deed, or frame a crime friendly fellow who can't prove he didn't commit their murder. In the streets they come from, crime and murder is an everyday occurrence, so their plans should work out a-okay...right.

    I really liked where the film goes from here: In desperation, Divinci and Rodriguez decide to frame a homeless bum for their murderous crime, played tremendously convincing by Dennis Quaid. The bearded man selected is so out of it, he doesn't even remember his name. So our two incisive corrupters give him a name, plant evidence, explain to him a story which he believes happened, and bribe him to confession.

    Characters who enter the story afterward are Cynthia (Lela Rochon), a stripper who is persuaded to lend a deceitful but helping hand to Divinci and Rodriguez, powerful lawyer Arthur Baylor James (Earl Jones), who comes to the rescue of the bum's hopeless defense, and another "lesser" lawyer named Elliot Goff (David Paymer).

    "Gang Related" contains a story that is as involving and intriguing as any action picture in the last several years. It uncommonly has unpredictable elements inside. The complication of the conflict are tense and involving as the characters sink themselves into a deeper pit of despair and trouble. But one thing came across my mind as I watched Divinci and Rodriguez work up a taut sweat as they make life or death cover up choices, why don't they just flee the country?

    Jim Kouf, who wrote and directed this final film to star the late Tupac Shakur, observes decent performances with the strong dramatic impulse manifested. He holds nothing back, and at times goes over the edge a little in his style of direction. The atmosphere created in "Gang Related" is abrasive, pervasive, and indiscreetly tough. But with such a movie titled "Gang Related," what would you expect?

    Brought to you by Orion Pictures.
    9Brad K.

    A gritty crime thriller.

    Gang Related had a great premise, which was enough to get me to want to see it. James Belushi (K-9, Race the Sun) and the late Tupac Shakur (Gridlocked, Poetic Justice) play two corrupt cops. They sell stolen drugs, kill the guy they sold it to, take the drugs & money, and label the crime as gang related. This has worked for the first ten times, but the 11th doesn't. The 11th guy they killed, turned out to be an undercover cop. So the two are put in charge of finding the killer. So knowing that they themselves killed him and could be in huge trouble, they begin to look for possible candidates to take the fall. Eventually they decide on a homeless man, wonderfully played by an unrecognizable Dennis Quaid (Switchback, Dragonheart). They then get Belushi's girlfriend and stripper, Lela Rochon (Waiting to Exhale, The Chamber) to testify against him. Soon though things don't work out as Rochon starts to lose confidence and more evidence comes out about the mysterious homeless man. Belushi and Shakur start to lose their trust and confidence with each other. This is a well-written film with some great dialogue and an awesome ending. James Belushi is great as the mastermind behind the plot and the one who won't give up. Tupac Shakur is just as good (in his final role) as the partner who has at least some sort of a conscience. Rochon is good. Fine support work is turned in by James Earl Jones and David Paymer as Quaid's lawyers. I highly recommend this movie. Rated R: (violence, language, nudity)

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The spiky onscreen relationship between Jim Belushi and Tupac Shakur was helped offscreen by the fact that Shakur liked to nail his scenes in one or two takes, and was annoyed by Belushi preferring to do it in multiple takes.
    • Goofs
      Before Frank pulls up to Manny's for the first time, you can see a blue sandbag on the curb, marking the spot where Jim Belushi is to stop the car at the proper spot so as to be within the camera frame.
    • Quotes

      [Baylor is questioning Cynthia Webb in court]

      Helen Eden: Objection! Mr. Baylor is purposely trying to confuse the witness.

      Arthur Baylor: I am *not* trying to confuse the witness; the *witness* has been trying to confuse *this court*!

    • Crazy credits
      Dedicated to Tupac Shakur (1971-1996)
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Seven Years in Tibet/RocketMan/Boogie Nights/Gang Related/Washington Square (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      Lost Souls
      Written by Tupac Shakur, Noble and E.D.I., D. Frank & M. Murphy

      Performed by 2Pac featuring Noble and E.D.I.

      Artists courtesy of The "Untouchable" Death Row Records

      Contains an interpolation of "Don't disturb this groove"

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    FAQ

    • How long is Gang Related?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 8, 1997 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Criminal Gang
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Orion Pictures
      • Kouf/Bigelow Productions
      • Blue Rider Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $5,906,773
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $2,443,237
      • Oct 12, 1997
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,906,773
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 56 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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