Back in my college days,
when I lived in Manhattan, I was friendly with an NYPD homicide detective who
was also a movie buff, and he hipped me to this little-seen drama, praising it as
one of the most accurate depictions he’d ever seen about how ugly the
gamesmanship within a police force can get. And, indeed, even though Report to the Commissioner is
fictional—it’s based on a novel by James Mills—the picture radiates
authenticity. Extensive location photography captures the dirty heat of
summertime New York City; intense performances burst with streetwise attitude;
and the vicious storyline is driven by cynicism, duplicity, and politics. Told
in flashback following some sort of terrible clusterfuck of a shootout at Saks
Fifth Avenue, the picture reveals how an ambitious undercover detective and a
rookie investigator cross paths, with tragic results.
Michael Moriarty,
appearing near the beginning of his long career, stars as hapless Detective Bo
Lockley, a newcomer to the NYPD investigative squad who gets paired with a
seen-it-all partner, African-American Richard “Crunch” Blackstone (Yaphet
Kott0). In a telling early sequence, Lockley watches Blackstone lean on black
suspects, even going so far as to spew racial epithets, which clues Lockley
into the level of moral compromise required of NYPD lifers. Meanwhile,
unbeknownst to Lockley, undercover narcotics cop Patty Butler (Susan Blakley),
a pretty blonde WASP who uses her looks to undercut suspicions that she’s a
police officer, gets a lead on a well-connected dealer named Thomas
“Stick” Henderson (Tony King). Smelling an opportunity for a high-profile bust
that will help his career, Butler’s commanding officer, Captain D’Angelo
(Hector Elizondo), approves a dangerous plan for spying on Stick. Soon
afterward, Lockley gets pulled into the situation—without being given crucial
information—and things go to hell. The movie climaxes with a tense hostage
situation inside Saks, during which high-ranking cops put more energy into covering
their asses than saving innocent victims.
This is dark stuff, making Report to the Commissioner a fine
companion piece to Sidney Lumet’s various ’70s pictures about cops and
criminals in New York City. And while Report
to the Commissioner is far from perfect—the script meanders into subplots
and some of the characters could have been consolidated for the purpose of
clarity—the movie has myriad virtues. The atmosphere sizzles, with
cinematographer Mario Tosi using haze filters and wide lenses to depict grungy
exteriors and sweaty interiors. Director Milton Katselas, best known as an
acting teacher, demonstrates a real gift
for integrating actors into spaces and thereby creating verisimilitude. Best of
all, though, are the film’s potent performances. Blakely’s sharp in a smallish role,
King is physically and verbally impressive, and Moriarty’s weirdly twitchy energy
is compelling. Furthermore, it’s hard to beat the roster of eclectic supporting
players—beyond Elizondo and Kotto, the picture features Bob Balaban, William
Devane, Dana Elcar, Richard Gere (in his first film role), and Vic Tayback. (Available as part of the MGM Limited Collection
on Amazon.com)
Report to the Commissioner: RIGHT ON
5 comments:
Wow, never ever heard of it. Finding out about movies like this are why I love your blog! Thanks.
Yep, me too, you've done it again Peter, this ones on my radar screen for sures!
The book it's based on (which takes the form of a, well, report to the Commissioner on said clusterfuck) is a cracker.
Extraordinary
One of the more realistic cop movies in existence. Sure, nowadays police departments aren't going to have a police woman work undercover where she is sleeping with criminals. Liability would be too heavy if she got killed and her family sued, but it's certainly not a stretch of the imagination that reckless police work happened back then.
Yaphet Kotto's performance is tremendously underrated. Not necessarily a full bad guy cop per se, just more of a product of his time and the system. Not to take away from Denzel Washington's Oscar winning performance in Training Day, but his character comes off as almost too over the top and cartoonish in comparison to Kotto's.
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