Wednesday, May 18, 2011

6. "Serpico" (1973)


"Frank, let's face it, who can trust a cop who won't take money?"
(Jack Kehoe as Tom Keough)

The movie "Serpico" is regarded as one of the most well-known crime films of all time. It is often named as Al Pacino's finest film performance, and was director Sidney Lumet's prized masterpiece. It was nominated for many awards, including two Academy Awards (Best Actor in a Leading Role [Al Pacino] and Best Writing [Waldo Salt and Norman Wexler]), two BAFTA Awards (Best Actor [Al Pacino] and Best Director [Sidney Lumet]), a Directors Guild of America Award (Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures [Sidney Lumet]), an Edgar Allen Poe Edgar Award (Best Motion Picture [Waldo Salt and Norman Wexler]), a Golden Globe Award (Best Motion Picture - Drama), and a Grammy Award (Album of Best Original Score Written for a Motion Picture). The film won three awards: A Golden Globe Award (Best Motion Picture Actor - Drama [Al Pacino]), a National Board of Review Award (Best Actor [Al Pacino]), and a Writers Guild of America Award (Best Drama Adapted from Another Medium [Norman Wexler and Waldo Salt]).

For these reasons and many more, I was really, really, really excited to watch it. Unfortunately, I was grossly disappointed. While it was an interesting story, there seemed to be too many random extra parts that didn't seem to serve a purpose and it was extremely slow. I started it when I first got it from Netflix in March; I did not finish it until today.

The Plot: "Serpico" is based on a true story and follows a police officer in the New York City Police Department in the 1960s and 70s. His family owns a shoe repair shop, but he wants to become a police officer. He wants to do homicide, so he follows the route he was told to take. He soon learns that those who know the politics of life get ahead and those who play by the rules are left behind. Serpico doesn't want any part of the corruption going on in the department. At the time, police officers routinely extorted money from the criminals they catch, such as prostitutes and drug dealers. The other officers do not like that Serpico won't partake and refuse to work with him. His determination to take the information to the higher authorities of local government mark him a snitch, a gross violation of the "blue wall of silence."

The Reality: As much as we hate to admit it, corruption is alive and well in almost every police department in America. Department corruption may not be as blatant now as it was in the 1970s, but it is certainly a problem. "Serpico" does an excellent job of demonstrating not only the problem and its entrenchment in the police departments, but the very real danger officers place themselves in when they refuse to "go with the flow."

On a funny note, I was quite amused when the precinct chief passed around marijuana to the officers in the morning briefing so that they would be able to recognize the "pungent smell" and the "effects of the drug on the user." That would never fly in today's departments!