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City of Industry

City of Industry

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $13.46
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: True Romance with a stranger romance. Tuff, tuff stuff.
Review: A jewel robbery goes bad, leaving a Mom and child without a Dad. Payback takes a while but the road it takes is wild. Not for the squeamish, but then that seems to be Harvey's niche. Shot in L.A. with style.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Too long to enjoy
Review: City of industry is a story of double-crossing and backstabbing. The story begins with a "flawless" jewel heist, following this Stephen Dorff's character kills two of the men and Keitel gets away. This is where it gets confusing so I'll stop.

A hard-edged movie full of action and drama, this is an incomplete summary of "City". One more thing to add, way too long, and way too many different sub plots to enjoy the whole piece. Harvey Keitel is his usual brilliant self, Stephen Dorff does a fine job, but both characters are one-dimensional and you loose interest very quickly. I found myself waiting for the end after the first 20 minutes. Fun and occasionally enjoyable, but ultimately it tries to hard and falls flat on it's face within the first hour and cannot recover.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: "I'm my own police."
Review: City of Industry is another entry into Tough Guy Cinema. The story could be from any noir of any decade. It's a stylish, violent crime movie. You're either on board or off.

Roy (Harvey Keitel) comes to LA to help his brother (Timothy Hutton) and two other hoods pull a high profile robbery. They take down a jewelery store and before you know it they're splitting the cash. Then Skip (Stephen Dorff) caps Timothy Hutton (who looks like preppy sleaze with that scruffy beard).

This movie is about Harvey Keitel getting revenge, no matter what. He dedicates his life, or about a week in his life, to hunting down Stephen Dorff. It's a stylish, slick film, full of LA 'industrial' locations of the machinery and criminal type. Take a bit of To Live and Die in LA, a bit of old fashioned noir, a lot of blood (including a head-bashing finale), and Harvey just being Harvey. A highlight is the laptpop bit in the lawyer's office. Subtle menace.

Highly recommended.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: "I'm my own police."
Review: City of Industry is another entry into Tough Guy Cinema. The story could be from any noir of any decade. It's a stylish, violent crime movie. You're either on board or off.

Roy (Harvey Keitel) comes to LA to help his brother (Timothy Hutton) and two other hoods pull a high profile robbery. They take down a jewelery store and before you know it they're splitting the cash. Then Skip (Stephen Dorff) caps Timothy Hutton (who looks like preppy sleaze with that scruffy beard).

This movie is about Harvey Keitel getting revenge, no matter what. He dedicates his life, or about a week in his life, to hunting down Stephen Dorff. It's a stylish, slick film, full of LA 'industrial' locations of the machinery and criminal type. Take a bit of To Live and Die in LA, a bit of old fashioned noir, a lot of blood (including a head-bashing finale), and Harvey just being Harvey. A highlight is the laptpop bit in the lawyer's office. Subtle menace.

Highly recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Cheap Action and Famke (Harmony)
Review: Harvey Keitel is pretty old and he needs to lose weight. Stephen Dorff needs to go away. Timothy Hutton is still around? Famke Janssen can stay and keep making tight movies. She makes this movie. Who cares about a group of losers who wants to rob a bank? Nobody. Who cares about Famke Janssen looking good? Everybody. This movie is a great bargain, so you need to buy it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An Examination Of The Criminal Element Among Us
Review: In this contemporary film noir, two brothers with the same alma mater-- Folsom Prison-- discover something about loyalty and what "honor among thieves" really means, in "City of Industry," directed by John Irvin. Lee Egan (Timothy Hutton) puts together a crew of four men, including his brother, Roy (Harvey Keitel), to take down a jewelry store in Palm Springs, California. If all goes well, they look to score a cool three mil in diamonds, and Lee has a fence in L.A. ready to move the merchandise. Lee and Roy are solid, as is Jorge (Wade Dominguez), the third member of the crew who is already looking at 2 to 5 in Folsom, having been convicted of carrying a concealed weapon. Jorge wants a quick score that will take care of his wife, Rachel (Famke Janssen), and their two kids while he's away. The wild card of the bunch is Skip Kovich (Stephen Dorff), their wheel man; he has a wild streak that emboldens him too much for his own good, a flaky girlfriend and some ideas of his own about how the split from the job should go down. Lee contends that it's going to be an easy score, with each man's share being "Not bad for a day's work." But you can bet that anytime you have a "sure thing" it's going to turn out to be anything but, and this caper is, of course, no exception.

As is befitting the subject matter, the film is dark-- much of it takes place at night, or in rather seedy, industrial locales-- with a touch of artistic cinematography that gives a sense of urgency to the story. It quickly shifts from the posh atmosphere of Palm Springs to downtown Los Angeles and Chinatown, an environment through which you get a sense of who these guys are and what they are about. As Rachel says to Roy at one point, "You guys are all alike--"

As Roy, Keitel carries the film with the kind of credible performance we've come to expect from him. While this character is certainly not a stretch for him-- you've seen "Roy" many times before, played by Keitel and others-- he does put a unique stamp on him; he's familiar, but Keitel manages to avoid letting him slip into stereotype. And that is no easy task when you take into consideration that in reality a man like Roy would necessarily share certain traits with others of his ilk. What makes the difference is Keitel's consummate ability as an actor, and his concern with fleshing out the details of his character.

The role of Lee is something of a departure for Hutton, though similar to the part he played in "Playing God," but with much more definition. He gives Lee a very "real" quality, the cool confidence of one who lives just beyond the fringe of what society deems acceptable. When he mentions that he's been in Folsom, it's believable. Dorff, meanwhile, is effective as Skip, a guy perpetually pumped and strung out, crazy-- but like a fox-- with an aura of menace about him that is nearly tangible. In attitude and style, Skip is reminiscent of Laurence Fishburne's two-fisted, gun toting Jump in "King of New York." And Janssen gives a notable performance also, successfully creating the one character in the film with whom the audience can sympathize. You feel her desperation and the concern she has for her children's well being, which effectively adds valuable context to the story.

The supporting cast includes Michael Jai White (Odell), Lucy Liu (Cathi), Reno Wilson (Keshaun), Dana Barron (Gena), Tamara Clatterbuck (Sunny), Brian Brophy (Backus) and Francois Chau (Uncle Luke). A violent and stylish examination of the criminal element in our midst, "City of Industry" is a hard-edged film that presents the matter-of-fact way in which those who subscribe to a life of crime seemingly function within their own sect of society. It's a part of life many would just as soon deny in reality, but as Steve McQueen said many years ago in "Bullitt," "That's where half of it is." And a film like this is not about to let you forget it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Modern Film Noir
Review: Interesting characters, believible plot. I have watched it a number of times, and enjoyed it each time. Probably my favorite DVD.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Get this-
Review: Lucy Liu is topless in it. I'd say that's just about the only reason you need to buy this.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very solid film
Review: Start with the great depictions of some unseen parts of L.A. and graft on themes of revenge, anger, reciprocity, obligation and stoic acceptance and you have City of Industry - a little-seen film that pleases on a number of levels. Keitel is a master in this role and wonderfully plays against Jamsen, while Dorff's full bore anger makes his extermination that much more interesting. A real treat of a noirish-type movie with a stellar soundtrack that well matches the landscape and mood of City's undercurrent L.A.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This action will provide petrifaction satisfaction!
Review: The interaction of the action in this attraction is a benefaction, and trust me this is not an overreaction. I advise u to consider investing some time in watching this movie if u r an action fan.


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