Film Review
The third of the
Dirty Harry films is generally considered the weakest,
mainly on account of a plot that is too silly to be taken seriously
and James Fargo's less than inspired direction. This didn't prevent the film from being a
huge box office hit. It out-grossed the previous two films in the
series -
Dirty Harry (1971)
and
Magnum Force (1973) -
and is still hugely popular, probably because it doesn't take
itself too seriously. In fact, at times, you could easily mistake
this for a pretty shrewd send-up of the mid-seventies police procedural
thriller.
As ever, Clint Eastwood is superlative as the maverick cop who gives
maverick cops a seriously bad name. Harry is dirtier than ever,
rude to his superiors, contemptuous of self-serving career-types and
sporting a not very cuddly misogynistic streak. At first, the
idea of pairing Harry up with a woman seems like a masterstroke.
Unfortunately, the screenwriters botched things by having Harry's
female sidekick gamely sacrificing herself as an inept drip of
a rookie, facile comedy fodder for Harry's
withering sarcasm. If only we had had Filthy Freda instead of the
wet-behind-the-ears Miss Moore this could have been something truly
remarkable.
Although
The Enforcer rarely
rises much above average at any point, it is surprisingly entertaining,
much less violent than the previous
Dirty
Harry films, and more character-led. The film may not
have made the best of the Callahan-Moore relationship, but Clint
Eastwood and Tyne Daly both turn in respectable performances, with more
than a whiff of sexual tension. The action sequences are
predictable but effectively realised, although anyone looking for a tense,
hard-edged thriller should look elsewhere. The feminists will
love this one - well, feminists with a long fuse and a
highly developed sense of irony...
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Inspector Callahan's sledgehammer methods of dealing with hoodlums
again lands him in trouble with his superiors. No one thanks him
for rescuing a pair of hostages from some gun-toting thugs.
Instead, he finds himself in admin Hell, interviewing candidates in the
personnel department. It isn't long before he is back in
business, however, tracking down a gang calling themselves the People's
Revolutionary Strike Force. The latter have raided a warehouse
containing the latest in military hardware and threaten to blow big
holes in San Francisco unless the authorities pay their ransom
demand. Callahan is just the man for the job, but he is far from
pleased when he learns that his new partner is a woman...
Marvellous.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.