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- CINEMA, Page 78Policeman's Lot
-
-
- By Richard Schickel
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-
- SEA OF LOVE
- Directed by Harold Becker
- Screenplay by Richard Price
-
- When did this vast cloud of depression settle over the
- movies' police force? Possibly when Joseph Wambaugh quit the Los
- Angeles department and started writing realistic (and highly
- adaptable) novels about the modern lawman's unhappy lot. In any
- case, it is now the formula for cop movies: the detective hero
- is usually divorced, drinking too much and sleeping too little.
- Often he wonders what it all means -- running around, risking
- your life and not making any discernible dent in the crime rate.
-
- What saves Frank Keller (Al Pacino) from the depths is wit.
- He is first seen as host of a church baseball brunch at which
- the Yankees have been announced to appear. They do not. What
- does appear is a squad of New York City's finest, who bust
- everyone in the place. For Keller had invited baseball fans who
- also happen to have made the most-wanted list.
-
- The same imaginative spirit animates his pursuit of a
- serial killer who is stalking womanizers (nice reversal of
- expectations there). Keller and his partner (John Goodman) place
- ads in the personal columns of an alternative newspaper and
- start dating the respondents. Needless to say, the likeliest
- suspect (Ellen Barkin) is also the best bet to comfort our hero.
-
- Sex and menace do not synergize as hysteria, the way they
- did in Fatal Attraction. This film is relatively calm. But it
- is worth taking in because all concerned catch the tone of New
- York's besieged multitudes. Their weariness is touched with
- hope, and their hope with irony. Their realism transforms what
- might have been an item easily overlooked by the moviegoer into
- something worth collaring.
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