Monday, September 16, 2013

In South Central Los Angeles street cops Brian and Mike are partners ballsout cowboys patrolling the streets as Latino gangs are in a power struggle with Blacks. Brian and Mike get lucky a couple of times making big drug and humantrafficking busts so a Mexican cartel orders their deaths. We meet Mikes pregnant wife (whom he married out of high school) and watch Brians search for a soul mate. There are internal squabbles within the ranks of the LAPD and lots of squadcar conversation. Can the lads escape the cartels murderous reach

Review

End of Watch seems to be another film that uses the foundfootage style but once again it's not a successful try. However it still gets what it wants by being a true to life buddy cop film with a ridiculous amount of intensity. End of Watch looks pretty simple as a crime thriller but everything is actually brilliant. The crimes are grim and the action is a load of thrills. But what really makes this film so appealing is the chemistry between Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Pe༚. Their bromantic moments keeps the entire film so charming. The rest of End of Watch is engaging and interestingly gripping.

The story is about the lives of the lead pair. As these police officers patrol around the streets they spend their time talking and joking around until they see something going on. Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Pe༚ brings it to life. Their chemistry is the magic of this film. When it gets serious it becomes really intense makes you wish both of them are safe on their dangerous jobs. The common elements of cop movies are explosions and stylish gunfights but this film is all about tension and momentum.

The foundfootage style is as messy as what the recent foundfootage film Chronicle did. Which falls into being unnecessary. It sometimes gets shots that aren't filmed on any handheld cameras. The camerawork is still well shot and serves a different experience but it could have been something like what action directors Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor(strangely has the same name of the main character) do. Shaking the camera ridiculously without calling it a foundfootage film. If you ignore the style it would be cool. The quality of the film is being realistic and there it succeeds. They left the impossibly cool police movie stuff behind and instead make them simply scrutinize arrest and watch the streets.

End of Watch doesn't have much of a concept but to depict the credible lives of these hero cops. While the lead stars shine on their beautiful downtoearth bromance there's a grim reality about to affect their lives thus makes this an indeed so compelling film. Still it could have been a Crank like film than a foundfootage. The crazy cam is a great effect but not the characters holding the camera. Aside from that it's a top notch thriller that is easy enough to enjoy. Worth a ride and recommended.