Brooklyn’s Finest (Theaters)

Brooklyn’s Finest is the latest film from acclaimed director Antoine Fuqua. The movie follows the lives of three New York cops all at different stages of their careers. When watching this film I couldn’t help but think about the movie Avatar. Both movies take familiar and somewhat recycled plot elements, yet they present them in a way that is so engaging that it almost makes them seem fresh. Brooklyn’s Finest is filled with cop cliches but it is so well executed that you can almost overlook many of these familiar elements and appreciate the movie as a whole.

BF follows the lives of three New York cops. Sal (Ethan Hawke) is a family man struggling to make ends meet in his household. When things get tough, he finds himself down a road of corruption from whihc there is not turning back. Eddie (Richard Gere) is the grizzled old veteran cop a week away from retirement who is saddled with a rookie partner for his remaining time on the force. Then there is Tango (Don Cheadle) who has been undercover so long he is losing his sense of identity and the line between who he is and who he is pretending to be is becoming increasingly blurred. Masterfully, all three of these plots intertwine at the end for the film’s climax.

While we’ve all seen similar characters to those mentioned here, the way they are portrayed by the actors is what really makes them so effective in this film. The entire cast does a great job making their roles believable. Another bright spot in the cast is the return of Wesley Snipes as Caz, a former drug dealer who was just released from prison. This is Snipes first role on the big screen since…Blade Trinity. It is nice to see him back in a major movie flexing his acting chops. Snipes is one of those rare actors who is an excellent physical presence as well as a commanding personallity. My only gripe is that his role in this film is fairly limited, but his interactions with Don Cheadle are some of the more interesting scenes of the entire film.

Overall, this is a pretty good flick. It doesn’t really break any new ground in terms of originality, but it is a well written and well acted film that is entertaining throughout.

Nights in Rodanthe (DVD)

Let me just start by saying that I’m not the biggest fan of romantic dramas. This is not for some macho reason, but more for the fact that so many of them follow a specific predictable formula. More often than not I can walk into one of those movies and within the first 5 minutes, I can predict that a character will die, which character it will be, and how it will play out. Many times I have tried to give these movies the benefit of the doubt, only to be burned by the same repetitive formula.  Reluctantly, I rented this movie on my wife’s request and I’m happy to say that I was pleasantly surprised.

Nights in Rodanthe is the story of two damaged human beings who are thrown together by fate. Adrienne Willis (Diane Lane) is a mother of two who has been separated from her husband due to his infidelity. Hurt and confused, she agrees to help her friend by taking her place as the inn keeper for the weekend at a beautiful beachfront resort in Rodanthe, North Carolina.   However, vacation season is long over but a single guest has reserved the resort at double the normal rate so naturally, they accommodate him. The guest happens to be Dr. Paul Flanner (Richard Gere), who has recently lost a patient on the operating table during a standard procedure and is undergoing a tragedy of his own. As events unfold, we learn that Dr. Paul is there for other reasons than a simple vacation. Over the course of the weekend, the two get to know one another and romance blooms between them.

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