‘Enforcement’ fuses overt sociopolitical commentary with genre thrills
“Enforcement”
Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 48 minutes. 666 (out of four)
The English title of Danish policing drama “Enforcement” loses something in the translation. The original title, “Shorta,” means “cops” in Arabic, and in the film, it’s wielded like an insult, spray-painted on squad cars, illustrating the fire and ire behind the word, and there’s plenty of ire and fire in this slick, socially conscious thriller. The directorial debut of co-writers and codirectors Frederik Louis Hviid and Anders Olholm, “Enforcement” is a high-octane examination of the problem we all live with: racist police brutality.
Set over the course of a day and night, a pair of cops, Jens (Simon Sears) and Mike (Jacob Lohmann), become trapped in a largely Muslim, vastly underpoliced neighborhood during violent riots after the police killing of a young Muslim man. Many a comparison has already been made to Walter Hill and John Carpenter, particularly their films “The Warriors” and “Escape From New York,” which both feature the very difficult task of getting across town. The brawny “Enforcement” doesn’t shy away from brutal action, but the film is more in line with recent police thrillers like Deon Taylor’s “Black and Blue,” and Ladj Ly’s “Les Miserables,” which fuse overt sociopolitical commentary with genre thrills.
Cinematographer Jacob Moller shoots “Enforcement” with a sharp, shiny clarity; saturated colors and muscular handheld shots place you on the ground and in the action. It has an almost hyper-real quality to it, a heightened reality that lends to the adrenaline rush of the filmmaking as tension builds and erupts.
There’s a moment in “Enforcement” that would be perfect for one of those freeze frame, “you’re probably wondering how I got here” moments, wherein Jens and Mike find themselves in their police vehicle under a hail of rocks thrown by a group of angry young Muslim men, with a cuffed Muslim teenager, Amos (Tarek Zayat) in the backseat. Mike, a powder keg of toxic masculine rage, has just stopped and frisked Amos for no apparent reason, subjecting him to a humiliating public search. His reluctant partner, Jens, is the strong, silent type, resisting Mike when he can, but mostly trying to keep the situation under control.
After they escape the car, Jens and Mike, with Amos in their custody, and under constant cellphone surveillance, will have to traverse this neighborhood alone, where police are a rare and unwelcome sight. They will have to confront their own beliefs, demons and each other, and every person they encounter will be in some way representative of the complexities of this community and the situation that has boiled over into angry, frustrated mayhem. Eventually, their paths will diverge, and over the course of many hard-fought hours of bloodshed and personal reckonings, Jens and Mike will find themselves in very different positions then where they started, personally and symbolically.
Mike has the biggest arc and transformation, and Lohmann gives a tremendously intense physical performance as a man whom you alternately fear, suspect and ultimately learn to trust even if he’s difficult to like. Both Jens and Mike commit heinous acts in the line of duty and survival, yet we’re on this journey with them and hope to see it, and therefore them, to the end. This conflicted relationship to our protagonists makes “Enforcement” compelling, but the film’s politics are complicated. We watch these riots unfold in this community from the perspective of two heavily armed white cops, and while there’s a desire to see them grow and change, it’s still the blood of young brown bodies on the streets. Even in fiction, that’s a narrative that cannot be ignored.