Here at Southern Vision we’re mainly devoted to foreign or independent cinema, but never let it be said that we’ve shut out the good old mainstream American movies. No way! Today I’ve decided to write a post about four of the greatest cop movies ever made; fantastic buddy action flicks that I recommend to almost everyone, the Lethal Weapon saga.
Now, there are a lot of cop movies out there. A lot. So what makes the Lethal Weapon films special? Well, everything. They’re classic films which made the perfect pairing of Mel Gibson and Danny Glover, throwing a loudmouthed Joe Pesci into the equation for all three sequels. What’s great about all four films is that they take their originality and uniqueness and retain it, rather than using it for 90 minutes and throwing it away. All four movies are a lot of fun to watch, and none of them, even the much disputed and disliked 4, bored me or were ‘bad’ movies, in my opinion.
With my recent purchase of the entire box set of the four films, I decided to rewatch them all in one go, in one night, taking nearly eight hours out of my day to do so. I don’t regret a second of it; I’ve seen them numerous times and never get tired of them.
I’m struggling to determine exactly what it is I love about them so much. It’s so many things; it’s the terrific chemistry between the lead actors; the way Joe Pesci seems like a third cop, rather than just the annoying trademark sidekick; the way other cops also manage to be likable and funny without even becoming main or even secondary characters; the memorable villains which are sometimes hilarious, sometimes dead serious and occasionally Bond-like; the incredibly hilarious sequences which sometimes come between the action, during the action or at all times when the action is not taking place.
And what makes this comedy so amazing is that it is contrasted in the same film by scenes of serious action and the drowning of a certain character which evokes a deadly revenge in Riggs’s enraged heart. There is nothing funny about his final quest for revenge, evoking memories of his dead wife who we’ve never met, but who throughout the entire series, particularly in the first two films, becomes obvious as a figure who has completely changed the way Riggs’s operated and lived. And when she died, so did a part of him.
But the comedy’s not all Pesci. The most hilarious stuff comes in the second film, as I mentioned before, and very little of that is from Leo Getz. There is one timeless scene where in order to create a distraction, Murtaugh and Getz are forced to approach a man working a building targeted by apartheid protestors and create a situation where the man has to convince a supposedly South-African Murtaugh not to return to South Africa. The exasperated man has run out of ideas, and finally breathes the simple but effective line: “Well… you’re black!”
In general, the films are all well-structured, but admittedly the fourth film is a bit of a letdown. By now, things have been wearing just a tiny bit thin. The comedy is still hilarious and the action engaging, but evidently producers didn’t think it was quite good enough, and decided to cast Chris Rock as an irritable rookie cop who has impregnated Murtaugh’s daughter, and Jet Li as a silent but deadly warrior weapon. We’ve seen them both play these respective parts in other movies, so it’s not really fresh and original when they bring it to this film. But the way Riggs, Murtaugh and Getz react to the introduction of these new characters is what makes it special. They still retain the charm of their charisma, and make what is certainly not the greatest sequel still seem very special.
The flaws in the series are few and far between; even the worst moments of the series are redeemed soon after by yet another classic sequence, and in general, the Lethal Weapon films are strong, funny and filled with great action sequences that are never over the top. These are films that will always be high regarded amongst the hundreds of tiresome action movies being churned out so constantly. People like Michael Bay and Joel Schumacher could learn a lot from these, that I cannot emphasize a lot. There will never be an action movie saga as successful, compelling and entertaining as this, a series I have loved since childhood and will continue to love, in high regard amongst the unending series of Hollywood popcorn flicks.
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Those are my thoughts on the series. Have you seen all four films, or only one? Have you seen any of them at all? Leave your thoughts in the comments below. Thanks.