Reel Critics
Ray Buffer
Eddie Murphy and Robert De Niro in a film that parodies cop shows and
reality TV, guest starring Rene Russo and William Shatner. Sounds
interesting huh? Well it could have been.
What it really amounts to is a poorly constructed story that is mired
in lame cliches and a sundry of contrived circumstances.
No-nonsense LAPD Detective Mitch Preston (De Niro) is a man of few
words, little patience and even less style. All he wants is to be left
alone to do his job the way he’s been doing it for more than 20 years.
Patrol Officer Trey Sellars (Murphy) is a different story. Instead of
being a cop, he would much rather play one on TV. A frustrated actor, he
spends his workdays taping off crime scenes and his evenings perfecting
action poses in front of a mirror, just waiting for the one big break
that will change his life.
“Showtime’s” intent to lampoon reality police shows seems to fall by
the wayside a third of the way into the film as the story suddenly
becomes a mediocre buddy movie. I went to the theater prepared to belly
laugh and guffaw but found only three or four opportunities to do so, and
even then, I may have been the only one laughing.
So what went wrong? Perhaps the fact that there were at least four
screenwriters. Too many cooks spoiled this stew. The director, Tom Dey,
also was responsible for bringing us “Shanghai Noon.” The ironic thing is
that this production in its casting, production costs and writing is
guilty of all the things that it attempts to satire.
Since the script holds no real ammunition for fun, the real humor
comes from the ad-libs and additional nuances that come from the seasoned
veterans, Murphy, De Niro and Shatner. Yes, Shatner. Shatner, who plays
himself, easily upstages the rest of the cast in the too-few scenes that
he is in.
The music is bouncy with a not too hip-hop flair and a sometimes,
somewhat satirical tribute to cop-show music. The picture looks good. The
special effects look good. The actors look good. The script is what
handicaps this film and turns it into a mundane, escapist, popcorn flick.
* RAY BUFFER, 31, is a professional singer, actor and voice-over artist.
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