Chattanooga Times Free Press - ChattanoogaNow

‘Black and Blue’ a lean, mean corrupt cop thriller

- BY KATIE WALSH TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

It seems like director Deon Taylor might be the only filmmaker actively keeping the mid-budget adult thriller alive in this age of extinction. Plus, he’s prolific: His topical corrupt cop drama “Black and Blue” is his second 2019 film, arriving just a few months after his surprising­ly entertaini­ng and campy home invasion horror thriller “The Intruder.”

Taylor’s work is broad melodrama; subtle it is not. But he has a knack for efficientl­y executing a killer premise, and he works with excellent cinematogr­aphers. Daniel Pearl, who shot the original “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre,” is appropriat­ely behind the camera for the cops and dealers tale that is “Black and Blue.”

Set in New Orleans’ Ninth Ward, the contained chase film follows a female police officer, Alicia West (Naomie Harris), who has captured an officer-involved shooting on her body camera. As she tries to make her way back to her precinct to upload the footage and enter it as evidence against the cabal of cops murdering their informants, Alicia has to dodge both the black

‘Black and Blue’

› Rating: R for violence and language

› Running time: 1 hour, 48 minutes

folks in the neighborho­od who are suspicious of her uniform, and the boys in blue who can’t be trusted.

Taylor’s film uses the current news moment to play with the idea of being watched, and to underscore the power of images in pursuit of truth and justice. It reminds us we live in a “pics or it didn’t happen” world, where video (whether body-cam or viral) has the power to condemn or exonerate. This is a point Taylor drives home with visual storytelli­ng.

As Alicia faces her foe, Malone (Frank Grillo), during a climactic confrontat­ion, smartphone­s capture the showdown. Taylor’s camera picks out images of graffiti eyes looming down on them like silent witnesses. It’s a brutally obvious metaphor, but Taylor makes the effort to show it, not tell.

Both Grillo and Harris are powerful actors, and Taylor unleashes them in a way they don’t often get to do. Tyrese Gibson and Mike Colter, who play Alicia’s reluctant ally

Above and below:

Mouse and a drug kingpin, respective­ly, feel miscast. Colter, who can’t hide the inherent decency he projects, would have excelled in Gibson’s role, which is a bit of a stretch for him, while Gibson would have appropriat­ely stunted as the flamboyant, sadistic gangster.

“Black and Blue” is big and broad. There is no stone unturned, no symbol unexploite­d, and the emotional tenor is at an 11. It’s melodrama for sure, and there’s absolutely no chance of interpreti­ng his film differentl­y than the way he intended, for better or for worse.

 ?? ALAN MARKFIELD/SONY PICTURES ?? Tyrese Gibson and Naomie Harris star in the thriller “Black and Blue.”
ALAN MARKFIELD/SONY PICTURES Tyrese Gibson and Naomie Harris star in the thriller “Black and Blue.”
 ?? ALAN MARKFIELD/SONY PICTURES ??
ALAN MARKFIELD/SONY PICTURES

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