Busting (1974)
DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | 01:31:36 | 4,39 Gb
Audio: English AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subtitles: None
Genre: Crime, Drama
DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | 01:31:36 | 4,39 Gb
Audio: English AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subtitles: None
Genre: Crime, Drama
LA cops Gould and Blake get in over their heads when they don't heed orders from above and go after a big crime boss. While higher ups in the police department want the cop duo to just focus on nabbing petty criminals, the team does so while still going after LA kingpin Rizzo. Various fist fights, chases, shootouts and other carnage occur as the two cops go after Rizzo's crime syndicate.
IMDB
Peter Hyam’s 1974 cop film Busting follows two officers of the L.A.P.D.’s vice squad - Mike Keneely (Elliot Gould) and Patrick Ferrel (Robert Blake) – and introduces us to them just as they’re about to bust a gorgeous high class hooker named Jackie (Cornelia Sharpe). The bring her in but she’s sprung on bail the next day, apparently the ‘trick book’ that the two cops brought in went missing and the case was kicked out of court. More likely, however, a local ‘businessman’ named Rizzo (Allen Garfield) pulled a few strings at headquarters and got her off without any hassle.
Back on the beat, the guys decide to go investigate some seedy activity at a local gay bar where a flamboyant queen (Antonio Fargas) tries to cut in when Mike and Patrick start dancing under the guise of not blowing their cover. When Mike refuses, a fight breaks out and he gets bit on the leg. Eventually their commanding officer, Sergeant Kenefick (John Lawrence), assigns them to stake out a men’s room in the park that’s apparently a popular cruising joint – but they’re not taking this whole Rizzo thing lightly.
Knowing that he’s up to know good they start nosing around and figure out, after making a bust at a porno shop offering backroom handjobs (courtesy of Erin O’Reilly!), that he’s involved in narcotics distribution. When they start making trouble for Rizzo by causing a scene at the strip club he owns and by following him around town, things get violent. Kenefick decides to split up the two best cops the vice squad has, but these two aren’t taking no for an answer and are going to bring Rizzo in no matter what it might cost them.
Shot on location at and around some remarkably sleazy looking Los Angeles locations, Busting has got loads of cool seventies atmosphere and style, from the wardrobe to the cars to Gould’s massive moustache to the score, this one just couldn’t and wouldn’t be made today. Showing no regard whatsoever for political correctness (gay men are referred to as ‘fags’ and ‘fruits’ more than once) the movie was very definitely a product of its time, but that never takes away from its entertainment value. Front and center in all of this are Gould and Blake, who make a pretty great pair here. Gould’s Keneely is a hot head, prone to solving problems with his fists, shooting his mouth off and getting himself into trouble while Blake’s Ferrel is the more reserved of the pair, letting his partner do his thing but always prepared to back him up when the time comes.
The fact that they play fast and loose with the rule book doesn’t seem to bother them, even if it comes back to bite them more than once. The two leading men suit their roles just fine, with Gould’s knack for snappy dialogue helping quite a bit. The other main player here, John Garfield as Rizzo, is also good in his part and it’s interesting to see him balance his characters sleazy business dealings with his façade of legitimacy and family values (at one point our cop heroes follow him into church). Throw in an interesting cast of supporting players, including Antonio Fargas as a gay bar patron with a mean streak, Frank Farmer and Sid Haig as Rizzo’s bodyguards and Erin O’Reilly (of The Baby!) and Cornelia Sharpe as hookers and you wind up with a pretty solid group of bit part players to back up the principals.
The film is very effectively shot, using some ominous red lighting in the gay bar scene to foreshadow the violence to come and employing some great POV shots in the requisite car chase scene that takes place in the finale. The filmmakers go for a more natural lighting style here, grounding the film in reality and eschewing the rapid fire editing popular in a lot of modern action movies in favor of a more calculated and deliberate approach. It might not have had quite the amount of substance, influence or cultural impact of similar films like The French Connection of Dirty Harry and quite frankly it isn’t as good as either one of those but it’s a very entertaining and occasionally sleazy film that fans of seventies cop films should really enjoy.
Fast paced and wickedly entertaining, Busting is everything a good seventies cop film should be: tense, violent, stylish, exciting and just a whole lot of fun to watch. MGM’s MOD/DVD-R release hasn’t got a lot of extra feature love going on but it looks and sounds pretty decent and the movie itself is a blast.
Special Features: Trailer
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