Film Review
After the phenomenal success of
Dirty Harry, there just had to
be a sequel. And of course there was, with Clint Eastwood
returning as the coolest, most cynical cop ever to put on a holster,
eager to inflict his notion of morality on a world whose moral compass
has gone well and truly A.W.O.L. This time round, Harry is more
Shirty than Dirty, willing to pick a fight with anything that can hold
a gun or a conversation, treating his play-by-the-book superiors with
the contempt they deserve (particularly as the book in question appears
to have been penned by Heinrich Himmler). The critics may have
been less than enthusiastic but audiences were enthralled by this
labyrinthine action-packed thriller sequel, which is every bit as
gritty, exciting and controversial as the first film.
At first sight,
Magnum Force
appears to be a limp apology for
Dirty
Harry, a film which was vociferously attacked in some quarters
for its seemingly unequivocal support for vigilantism. Once again, Harry
Callahan is the outsider, but the outsider to a system that is
apparently even more willing to act as judge, jury and executioner than
he is. When he discovers there is a faction within the police
department that has gone horribly bad, it is up to Harry to champion a
judicial system which, although imperfect, is the best we have.
In an astonishing volte-face, bad boy Callahan is now trying to persuade us that
vigilantism is not the answer.
Yet, just like the unfathomable Harry, there is much
more to this film than meets the eye. Far from being a lame
attempt to appease its liberal-minded detractors,
Magnum Force is a sobering
reflection on contemporary society. In an increasingly violent
world, the public expect more from the police and the judicial system,
and when crooks and hoodlums are seen to get away with murder it is
understandable that the clamour for instant retribution grows louder
and louder. But there is a price to be paid if we grant more
powers to the police and allow the judicial process to be
short-circuited. What
Magnum
Force shows us is a horrifying glimpse of the future we may be
sleepwalking towards - one in which the guardians of the law routinely
dispatch criminals so that we may sleep soundly in our beds - until the
same angels of death come knocking on our doors...
With Don Siegel unavailable or unwilling to direct the sequel to his
groundbreaking
Dirty Harry,
the role of director fell to Ted Post, who had previously directed
Clint Eastwood in the popular television series
Rawhide. Whilst he may lack
Siegel's flair for innovation, Post does a respectable job,
particularly in the execution of the tense action sequences.
Backed up by a well-honed screenplay (from future directing talents
John Milius and Michael Cimino) and some solid performances (including
one from David Soul, soon to be immortalised as Detective Ken
Hutchinson in
Starsky and Hutch),
Post delivers a sequel that is very nearly as slick and compelling as
the original.
As in the first
Dirty Harry
film, it is Eastwood's laconic, inscrutable portrayal of the morally
ambiguous cop that makes it such a fascinating film, well above the
standard of the run-of-the-mill police procedural thriller.
Magnum Force deals provocatively
yet intelligently with complex themes and has acquired an even greater
significance in our troubled post-9/11 world. The urgent moral dilemma
that visibly torments Eastwood's character in this film is one that
society still has to come to grips with: just how far should the police
go to ensure that justice is seen to be done? Indeed, what is justice -
sanction or retribution?
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Shortly after being acquitted of a murder charge, the high-profile
gangster Carmine Ricca is shot dead by a man dressed as a motorcycle
traffic cop. This is the first in a series of brutal killings in
which the victims are all hoodlums who have so far escaped
justice. Still in disgrace for his handling of the Scorpio case,
Harry Callahan is brought in to investigate but immediately gets on the
wrong side of his superior, Lieutenant Briggs. Callahan resents
being ordered by Briggs to stake out a known gangster, because he is
convinced that the killer is not an outlaw but a member of the police
force. A likely suspect is Callahan's old friend Charlie McCoy, a
disillusioned cop whose hobbies include playing Russian roulette and
sounding off against the failings of the judicial system. When
McCoy is murdered, Callahan realises that the threat is far greater
than he had dared to imagine. He finds he has to risk his own
neck to defend a system that he has grown to despise. The
question he has got to ask himself is: does he feel lucky...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.