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Cops & Robbers
(1973)
Director: Aram Avakian
Cast: Cliff Gorman, Joseph Bologna, Dick Ward
When I was a kid, having a wild imagination
and time on my hands, I would often think up
extreme situations and place myself in them,
asking myself, "What would I do if this actually
happened?" My subsequent pondering on and off
across long periods of time about these things
usually resulted in some eventual dead-set plans
should the unlikely ever happen. One of my
finest plans was what I would do if there ever
was a plague that wiped out pretty much all of
mankind but me. The first thing I would do would
be to head to police precincts and gun stores to
get guns and bullet-proof vests. Then I would
get a large truck, fill it up with food and
various supplies, and drive out of town far into
the countryside before the stink from the
decaying bodies got too much. Finding some
isolated cabin, I would stay put for the next
few months learning to shoot and reading various
survival guides. Then I would head back to town,
and settle somewhere strategic (for defence and
reaching certain stores), and start planting
vegetable gardens near bodies of fresh water. I
would always carry a gun with me, and a knife
strapped near my ankle. And I would gather and
plant guns and ammo in hidden places all over
the area... should I ever get into a moving gun
battle with some enemy. Another plan I had was
if I was to ever stumble across a large amount
of money a la A Simple Plan. Even
back then I knew the pitfalls of serial numbers,
though I came up with a plan so I could keep my
wealth... which I won't tell you, since there's
always a chance that someday I will come
across a lot of money.
When it came to illegal scenarios of a more
frowned-upon nature - like armed robbery or
murder - I didn't do any real serious thinking
about them. For one reason, my value system
regarded such things as simply being morally repellent.
Another reason was that I couldn't possibly see
myself ever being in the situation where I had to do such things, at least
in the kind of world I was currently living in.
Come to think about it, I believe I simply
didn't want to imagine myself having to do
those kind of things. While those were the main
reason my mind didn't dabble much into hard-core
crime, there was also another reason, less major
but always nagging in the back of my mind: I
believed that if I ever was to partake of these
activities, I would get caught. Oh sure, I knew
a lot more of the so-called tricks of the trade
than probably other kids my age, being a
voracious reader among other things. I knew
countless dumb things criminals had done to get
themselves captured, plus I knew countless ways
law enforcers had tracked down even the smarter
criminals. Yet the idea of committing crime
still scared me off, not just for the reasons I
discussed at the beginning of this paragraph. I
knew that the world is not perfect - the human
mind can slip despite careful planning, and the
forces of chance are always at work, and can
come into play no matter how careful you may
plan.
I was reminded of those facts of chance and
human ability again while watching Cops &
Robbers, a movie that illustrated just
what Robert Burns meant when he wrote, "The best
laid plans of mice and men often go awry."
The
movie didn't just seem content to leave anything
resembling a "message" at just that, though.
Other things I got from the movie: Nothing in
life comes easy; Not only is life is tough, but
it often gets a lot tougher when you try to
improve your lot; And you can't trust anyone
100%. Looking back at what I just wrote, I
realize that I am making this movie sound much
harsh and cynical, which it really isn't. For
one thing, it's based on a novel by Donald E.
Westlake, who has written a number of comic
caper novels, some of which have also been
brought to the big screen like The Hot
Rock and What's The Worst That
Could Happen? In fact, Westlake himself
wrote the screenplay adaptation for this movie.
The events of the movie center around the
characters of Tom (Gorman, Angel)
and Joe (Bologna, My Favorite Year),
two friends and policemen in New York who are
getting tired and burned out by their thankless
profession. One day, Joe confesses to Tom that
he robbed a liquor store while in uniform - out
of boredom, frustration, money-problems, Joe
himself is not sure. It doesn't matter- what
matters was that it was so easy. Tom's
impressed, so impressed that not long afterwards
he suggests to Joe that they use their uniforms
with their knowledge of police procedure and
criminal behavior to pull off something big. It
takes them no time at all to locate mobster
"Patsy" O'Neil (played by John P. Ryan,
Death Wish 4), who regularly handles
stolen merchandise. He tells them to get
him untraceable bearer bonds, which he'll pay
20% of their value for. Now it should be just
as easy for Tom and Joe to find the place with
the right kind of bonds, rob the place, and make
the exchange with Patsy and his boys - right?
What will probably surprise most viewers of
Cops & Robbers is the manner of
which this premise is played out. There are
funny moments in the movie, and there are other
moments of a more serious nature (even to the
point where people's lives are being
threatened), but in the end you can't either
call what you've watched a laugh-filled comedy
or a gritty drama. Instead, Aram Avakin directed
each of the various events in a way that in the
end may even be considered a new genre:
"Realistic". There are hilarious things that are
done and said, and the characters commit acts
that result in suspense, but all these things
feel as if they very well could really happen.
There is nothing about the movie that feels
especially exaggerated or artificial, right down
to the locations. In someone else's hands, we
would probably see the characters primarily
outside and in the heart of the city. But Avakin
shows us another side of the New York district.
We see the grass-and-tree shouldered freeways
miles away from the skyscrapers. Not far from
there, we're shown the suburban neighborhood Tom
and Joe live in, a jungle of chain-link fences
and older houses crammed unbelievably tight
together. We do get a scene in Central Park,
though mostly we just glimpse almost-hidden
nooks that most people (and other movie
productions) pass by. When we actually get
scenes in the streets of the big city, more often than not we are
taken to districts that still have small corner
grocery stores, and only the occasional building
in the block looks especially run-down and
needing of demolition.
We're not used to seeing New York this way,
after seeing so many other movies showcasing New
York's skyscrapers or multi-blocks of rubble and
abandoned buildings. Even though I've never been
to New York - recently or in the era this movie
was filmed in - this portrayal all the same somehow feels
very authentic. The feeling extends to whenever
we are taken indoors, which is in fact where a
lot of the movie actually takes place. It seems
accurate that Tom and Joe's worn-out precinct
shows inefficient design for its day and age,
and nothing about the gigantic multi-section
brokerage firm that the two ultimately decide to
rob rings false as well. But it's not only that
the locations have been very well chosen, it's
also the manner of which they have been filmed.
More often than not, the camera takes some extra
steps backwards so we are not just
focused in on
the characters in the particular scene. We don't
just get a feeling of the action that's
happening, we get a feeling of the surrounding
environment as well. And this actually gets us
more involved in the action, believe it
or not. When two characters are talking far in
the background down a hall, for example, there's
an almost eerie feeling like we are
eavesdropping, that we are actually there.
Avakin uses several other neat little techniques
to ensure this feeling is maintained. For
example, aside from several reprises of the
gentle and non-jarring title song sung by Grady
Tate, there is very little musical scoring in
the movie. If there's anything playing the
background, you can almost be sure it will be
radio chatter from the police or from a
commercial broadcaster - again, more like in
real life.
Then there are the things the various
characters in the movie do and say - which too
have that ring of authenticity to them. Take how
Tom and Joe work up to committing the robbery.
It doesn't come quickly - the idea first comes
across more as a "What if..." wonderment than
anything else. Then there's a long time
afterwards when they casually toss back and
forth with no progress as to what on earth they
could do. In fact, it's only by pure luck that
they learn of O'Neil and where they can contact
him. Then there's the meeting with O'Neil, and
then the subsequent robbery after their careful
planning. Both sequences are presented without
pretension or flash, getting right to what the
characters have to do with nothing distracting
from the tension that inevitably starts to
build. In both of these scenes, things
inevitably happen that these two characters
weren't expecting, things that could get them
caught or even killed. When these things happen,
you can't help but squirm in your seat, getting
the feeling that these guys are starting to get
seriously over their heads. But although Tom and
Joe are obviously not geniuses, they aren't
stupid as well. They're cops, for goodness sake,
so they have obviously seen and learned a lot in
their profession. They make some mistakes, but
we see that they have also planned for some
things other people in their shoes might miss.
We see them use their skills learned in their
occupation to get them out of trouble or nip it
in the bud before it can go any further. They
have a chance... but so do the various people
and obstacles they encounter, and we are never
allowed to forget it.
I should also add that much of this tension
that comes up comes from Ryan's excellent
performance as O'Neil. (By the way, Ryan hasn't
made a new movie for eight years now - what
happened to him?) He actually doesn't appear in
that much of the movie, but he makes the most of
his limited time. He gives his character a
double-edged casualness, portraying not only a
seen-it-all and don't-try-to-trick me attitude,
but also what seems to be a thinly veiled utter
contempt to these amateurs who are trying to
make a deal with him. Any way you look at it,
he's one dangerous individual, and even when he
isn't around you know that he's just around the
corner waiting to act. While it would be tough
for anybody else in the cast to match this
performance, even under these circumstances
Gorman and Bologna seem to be underperforming.
It's not that either of them are downright bad,
it's more that there's nothing about their
performances that is really memorable, or even
seriously differentiate one from the other. It
also doesn't help that they have some
resemblance in their facial characteristics, nor
that we learn very little about their
characters' personal lives. Though we learn both
men are married, their wives barely get
mentioned despite all their planning, and are
actually onscreen for even less time
The screenplay does attempt to try and
explain what pushes these previously law-abiding
men into committing crime, giving both fellows a
scene or two experiencing various work-related
agonies while on the beat. But these scenes are
too few, too rushed; to understand their
eventual decision, we need to get some idea that
these kind of things happens day after day,
never easing in their harshness. Perhaps
Westlake was afraid of making the movie too
cynical, considering there was already a good
amount of serious subject matter. He does
lighten the mood on several occasions with some
welcome comic relief, with citizens making wacky
(yet believable) complaints to the police, as
well as a very funny sequence where the
brokerage firm's security guards are interviewed
after the robbery - which I could see happening
in real life as well. It's that realistic touch
again. About the only thing viewers may object
to about Cops & Robbers' realistic
viewpoint is with how it handles the climax. As
plausible as it may be shown, I can still see
some people may fell a little let down by it,
not getting as big and elaborate a "payoff" for
their 90 minutes invested as they would get from
watching another movie. But isn't life like that
sometimes? Oh, let me stop spouting this
philosophical crap - yeah, I wanted to see some
juicy action here! But I can suppose I can live
without it, seeing how good the movie is most of
the other times.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)
Check Amazon for Donald E. Westlake's
novel "Cops & Robbers"
See also: Busting,
Route 9,
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