Narc
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Narc is a 2002 American neo-noir crime thriller film directed and written by Joe Carnahan and starring Jason Patric and Ray Liotta (who also co-produced). The plot revolves around the efforts of two police detectives in search of the murderer of an undercover police officer. As they investigate, they engage in unethical behavior and uncover dark secrets that will challenge their fragile relationship.

Plot

Undercover narcotics officer Nick Tellis chases a drug dealer through the streets of Detroit. Tellis shoots and kills the dealer when he holds a child hostage, but a stray bullet hits the child s pregnant mother, causing her to miscarry. Eighteen months later, Tellis is tasked with investigating the murder of an undercover officer, Michael Calvess. Tellis reluctantly agrees to take the case on two conditions: that he will get a desk job if he secures a conviction, and that he is partnered with Detective Henry Oak, whom Tellis has read about in the Calvess case file. The police chief accepts Tellis conditions, but warns him about Oak s instability.

During their first meeting, Oak reveals to Tellis his belief that the department wants the Calvess case buried and it is all about politics. The detectives visit the scene where a drug dealer has been shot dead in his bathtub; Tellis surmises the death was accidental and self-inflicted. Tellis notes that the shotgun at the scene is a SWAT weapon with the serial number filed off.

While the partners have a discussion about family, Oak recalls a drug bust decades prior, where he found a ten-year-old girl who was being sold into prostitution by her stepfather, resulting in Oak beating the man; he sees parallels with the current case. Tellis visits Calvess widow Kathryn, and asks about her relationship with her husband while he was on the street. Oak, who is protective of Calvess family, turns up at the house and angrily confronts Tellis.

The detectives next visit the home of a man involved in Tellis shooting. Although they find no evidence to suggest he murdered Calvess, they find another officer s badge on the premises. The man pulls a gun and wounds Tellis before Oak kills him in self-defense. The case assailant is determined to be Calvess killer and the case is closed. However, Tellis and Oak are furious as they believe the killer has yet to be found and continue to investigate independently.

When the detectives visit an auto body shop, Oak attempts to force a confession out of a pair of suspects. Tellis is increasingly suspicious of Oak s tactics. Tellis finds police-issue guns in a car belonging to one of the suspects, including one that belonged to Calvess. Oak beats both men until Tellis tells him to get CSI tools from the car.

When Oak leaves the room, Tellis locks the door and asks for the truth from the suspects. They explain that Calvess, who had fallen into drug addiction, blew Tellis cover eighteen months before and caused the shooting. On the day of the murder, Calvess tried to deal with the two dealers, but it went badly.

According to their story, Oak arrived, having trailed Calvess to confirm rumors that he was an addict. Calvess went for his weapon, which was the dealers justification for attacking him. The two men ran off as Oak shot at them. Tellis confronts Oak and accuses him of murdering Calvess, which Oak denies. Tellis then raises the issue of Oaks relationship with Calvess wife, Kathryn.

Kathryn was the ten-year-old girl who was pimped out by her stepfather. Oak considers her the daughter he never had and has remained close. He has been protecting her by covering crimes she committed in her teenage years. Tellis tells Oak he will make the arrest and Oak beats him with the shotgun and resumes brutalizing the dealers.

Oak turns the tape recorder on and attempts to beat a confession out of the men, threatening to shoot them. Tellis breaks into their car, retrieves a gun, calls for back-up, and re-enters the building. He shoots Oak when Oak refuses to put his gun down. Tellis moves to aid Oak and, realizing he s dying, pleads for the truth of what happened the night Calvess died.

Oak explains that Calvess shot at the dealers as they fled from Oak, leaving the shoulder wound. Oak argued with him, explaining that he had had enough of defending Calvess and would turn him in to the department. In despair, Calvess shot himself. Oak had been protecting his name and family so Calvess wife could receive his pension. Oak s motive was to convict the dealers, whom he felt had made Mike a junkie. Oak dies in Tellis arms, leaving the confession on tape and Tellis with only moments to decide what to do with it.

Cast

  • Jason Patric as Detective Nick Tellis
  • Ray Liotta as Lieutenant Henry Oak
  • Chi McBride as Captain Cheevers
  • A.C. Peterson as Freeman Franks
  • Lina Giornofelice as Jeanine Mueller
  • Karen Robinson as Liz Detmer
  • Krista Bridges as Audrey Tellis
  • Myles Donaldson as Tellis Infant Son
  • Gavyn Donaldson as Tellis Infant Son
  • Anne Openshaw as Kathryn Calvess Stacey Farber as Young Kathryn
  • Stacey Farber as Young Kathryn
  • Carly Marie Alves as Lilian Rose Calvess
  • Mallory Mahoney as Calvess Daughter
  • Alan van Sprang as Detective Michael Calvess
  • Donna Croce as Oak s Wife
  • Paulino Nunes as Officer Ellis Breaver
  • Thomas Patrice as Officer Marcotte
  • Tony De Santis as Art Harlan, The Medical Examiner
  • John Ortiz as Octavio Ruiz
  • Marilo Nunez as Ruiz Smoldering Squeeze
  • Busta Rhymes as Darnell Big D Love Beery
  • Richard Chevolleau as Latroy Steeds
  • Bishop Brigante as Eugene Deacon Sheps
  • Carson Durven as Leonard Leo Lee Leflore
  • Lloyd Adams as Walter Dandridge
  • Booth Savage as Cecil Mitchum
  • Dan Leis as Elvin Dowd
  • Kevin Rushton as Meth Dealer
  • Darren John as Drug Dealer

Production

Development

The script for Narc originated from a short film made by Joe Carnahan while a student at San Francisco State University. The script was pitched as a raw cop drama in the tradition of the 70 s films of Sidney Lumet and William Friedkin. The script failed to generate interest, with Carnahan saying financiers told him, This is an N.Y.P.D. Blue episode. Nobody cares about the cop genre anymore.

The script eventually ended up in the hands of Ray Liotta, who had then just switched over to Endeavor, the same talent agency as Carnahan. ”I was looking for a movie that would have some impact, or at least make some cash, Liotta said. The actor set up a meeting with Carnahan, and, impressed with the director’s passion for the film, agreed to both star in and produce it.

For a year, the film struggled to find full financing as it was a violent cop movie with no marquee names. Finally, an independent company called Cutting Edge Entertainment agreed to produce Narc and principal photography got underway in 2000.

Filming

Beginning February 2000, Narc was shot in 27 days in Toronto, with one day in Detroit. When the low-budget production was running low on funding two weeks into filming, the film’s producers and director persuaded 17 investors to fund the project so filming could be completed. The 17 people earned producer credits on the film.

Reception

Release

The film had its world premiere at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival. It nearly did not secure a theatrical distribution deal and almost went direct-to-video; however the film was circulated amongst industry figures and actors like Dustin Hoffman and Warren Beatty, who praised the film. Tom Cruise and his producing partner Paula Wagner screened the film and were so enthusiastic about it that they agreed to come on board as executive producers. In April 2002, Cruise’s support led to Paramount Pictures making a $3 million-deal to distribute the film theatrically during awards season.

Box office

Narc had its premiere in Beverly Hills on December 17, 2002, before receiving a limited release in six theaters on December 20, 2002, grossing $63,303 with an average of $10,550 per theater and ranking #45 at the box office. The film then had its wide release in 822 theaters on January 10, 2003 and grossed $2,825,807 with an average of $3,437 per theater and ranking #12. The film ended up earning $10,465,659 domestically and $2,168,088 internationally for a total of $12,633,747, doubling its $6.5 million production budget.

Critical response

Narc received positive reviews from critics and has a Certified Fresh rating of 84% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 158 reviews with an average score of 7.13 out of 10. The consensus states Jason Patric and Ray Liotta are electrifying in this gritty, if a little too familiar, cop drama. The film also has a score of 70 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 34 reviews, indicating generally favorable reviews .

Positive reviews praised the acting and the story for putting a fresh spin on familiar cop film clichés. Some critics compared the film to landmark ’70s police thrillers like The French Connection and Serpico—films that had style and energy to spare but were more interested in pursuing the minds of their characters than creating elaborate action sequences.

The film’s grittiness was also noted. In a three-star review, Roger Ebert wrote, In terms of its urban wasteland, the movie descends to a new level of grittiness. These streets aren t mean, they re cruel, and to work them is like being the garbage man in hell. He added the movie s writer and director, Joe Carnahan, brings a rough, aggressive energy to the picture.

Critics noted Jason Patric and Ray Liotta have played similar roles in cop films before, but that their performances here still managed to surprise. Chuck Rudolph of Slant Magazine wrote Liotta is destined for to be remembered for his daunting work here—he allows Oak’s imposing nature to run far deeper than a mere façade, but it is Patric who embodies the film’s soul. Quiet, tentative, but capable of meeting Oak toe to toe, it’s a remarkable piece of acting that suggests the unknowable state of turbulence and frustration that comes with investigating violent crimes.

Criticisms mainly centered on the film’s familiar themes and plot arcs, such as street justice versus morality, as well as of the film’s ending, which Ebert defended as a neat and ironic exercise in poetic justice.

Accolades

The film was nominated for three Independent Spirit Awards, including Best Director for Carnahan, Best Supporting Male for Liotta, and Best Cinematography for Alex Nepomniaschy.

Attempted TV adaptation

In 2014, Paramount Television announced plans to develop a TV series that would be a new take on Narc, with Carnahan directing and writing the pilot episode. Eminem was reported to be in negotiations to join the series as a music supervisor and executive producer, including writing new songs, but plans on a TV series did not move forward.

Year 2002
ReleaseDate 2003-01-10
RuntimeMins 105
RuntimeStr 1h 45min
Plot When the trail goes cold on a murder investigation of a policeman an undercover narcotics officer is lured back to the force to help solve the case.
Awards Awards, 1 win & 8 nominations
Directors Joe Carnahan
Writers Joe Carnahan
Stars Ray Liotta, Jason Patric, Chi McBride
Produced by Jed Baron, Peter Block, Tom Cruise, Andy Emilio, Randall Emmett, George Furla, Carol Gillson, David Glasser, Michael Z. Gordon, Michelle Grace, Michael S. Grayson, Tony Grazia, Brian R. Keathley, Seth J. Kittay, Ray Liotta, Stephen Montgomery, Diane Nabatoff, Julius R. Nasso, Sharon Seto, Adam M. Stone, Scott G. Stone, Paula Wagner, Jeff G. Waxman
Music by Cliff Martinez
Cinematography by Alex Nepomniaschy
Editing by John Gilroy
Casting By Felicia Fasano, Mary Vernieu, Clare Walker
Production Design by Greg Beale, Taavo Soodor
Art Direction by Greg Beale
Set Decoration by Jeffrey Butler
Costume Design by Gersha Phillips
Makeup Department Tracy Bentley, Russell Cate, Susan Exton-Stranks, Judy Lovell, Diane Mazur, Amanda Milne, Leanne Morrison
Production Management Daniel Hank, Stephen Montgomery
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director Tony Grazia, Michael Johnson, Andrea McCabe, Alison McFarlane, Pierre Ouellet, Andrew Pritchard, Marcel Saumure, Raj Singh
Art Department Richard Armstrong, Jon Bankson, Gil Barbosa, Darryl Beebe, Andeu Bertos, Tracy Bock, Jamie Bogdanovich, Jude Britton, Mark Bryson, Hamish Buchanan, Su Cordero, Joe Doto, Brian Dudley, Visvaldis Freimanis, Christopher Galea, David Greig, Andrew Hill, Cameron Hoffman, Sean Hollis, Robin Klein, Victoria Klein, Diana Magnus, Jack McCullough, Mark McGann, Bradley McInnis, David McQuiston, Steve Meil, J.D. Moore, Graydon Nichols, Norm Ouzounis, Sean Rourke, Jeff Schouten, Stephen Travis, Tamara Ulisko, Susan Worts, David Wright, Michael Zaharuk
Sound Department Tom D. Backman, Alek Bromke, Richard Duarte, Rolando Duque, Jake Eberle, Jerry Gilbert, Marcel Lehrer, Mark McNeilly, Dominique Meyer, Jonathan Miller, Michael Miller, Andrew Patterson, Rick Penn, Paul Ratajczak, Shelley Roden, Jamie Scarpuzza, William Tabanou, Lance Wiseman, James Wright
Special Effects by Jonathan Ahee, Mark Ahee, Jason Blagdon, Darcy Callaghan, Michael Gagnon, Michael Innanen, John LaForet, Dana Sarafinchan, Jason Stanton, David Mugridge, David Waszak
Visual Effects by Brady Hallongren, Sean Hewitt, Rita Schrag, Jim Stewart
Stunts Eric Bryson, Randy Butcher, Errol Gee, Chad Keens-Douglas, Danny Lima, Daryl Patchett, Ken Quinn, Robert Racki, Don Stockford, Dave Van Zeyl, Bryan J. Thomas
Camera and Electrical Department Cynthia Barlow, Dean Dallas Bentley, Jonathan Brown, Randy Brown, Deanna Cadette, Steve Challis, Michael Courtney, Carolyn Cox, Bob Davidson, Douglas W. Dixon, William Eichler, Nicholas Fasullo, Ross Fasullo, Cy Fawcett, Henry Fong, Michael Fylyshtan, Mark Giles, Jason Greenslade, Thomas Higney, Paul Howden, Reni Hoz, Ken Huff, Vanessa Ireson, Chris Kelly, Rohan Lawrence, Junior Lewis, Mike Macauley, Ari Magder, Heidi McKnight, Ryan McMaster, Michael Meagher, Andrew Medicky, Joseph Micomonaco, Bruce Morton, Lars Niederhauser, Mark Penney, Eva Percewicz, Cathy Petch, Geoff Pope, Stephen Roberts, David Rumley, Chirayouth Jim Saysana, Robert Skates, Craig Steele, Jack Studzienny, Michelle Wachter, Mark Willis, Chris Wilson, Tara Yates, Ramesh Yogendran
Casting Department Sara Cuthbert, Marta Tomkiw
Costume and Wardrobe Department Koreann Ciandre, Heather Crepp, Wayne Godfrey, Liz Gregg, Michael Ground, Christine Hartmann, Andrea Jenkins, Stephanie Lees, Michelle Lyte, Karen Steele
Editorial Department Bob Fredrickson, Nancy Hirami, Charlene Olson, Mila Patriki, Carol Stutz, Richard Weinman
Location Management Don Cornelius, Dino Mangos, John Mendes, Mark Moore, John Rakich, Paul E. Schulz, Trevor A. Weber
Music Department Tobias Enhus, Michael Z. Gordon, Daniel Peter Kolton, Peter Maunu, Brian Ross, Fredrik Sarhagen, David Torn
Script and Continuity Department Donna Croce
Transportation Department Rick Anglin, Graeme Atherton, Dan Carleton, David Di Venanzo, Naeda Keeler, Robert MacLean, Brian Marwick, Dave Marwick, Bob Mitchell, Jane Siekris, Minon White
Additional Crew Alan Alters, Susan Bartholomew, John Frenchie Berger, Steve Cardone, Lyssa J. Caster, Greg Coultas, Debbie Crow, Michael Deyo, Phillip Glasser, Tynan Grierson, Christian Hamilton, Ali Jazayeri, Adam Jordan, Tom Joyner, Ruzanna Kegeyan, Monica Kim, Alex Kontsalakis, Nick Kontsalakis, Dannis Koromilas, Ed Labowitz, Julie McCambley, Albert Meade, Todd Merritt, Robert Mintz, Anne Paynter, Jeremy Pinard, Morgan H. Rector, Mary Robbie, Natalie Rodriguez, Annique Rousseau, Glenn Solomon, Peeter Tammemagi, Steven Tarte, Karen Tufts, Jared Underwood, Dixie D. Walker, Norman Wallerstein, M. Dal Walton III, Kenny Williams, Andrew Wolinsky, Mitzi Young, David Milhous, Daniel Villagomez, David Waszak
Thanks Dennis Archer, Sean Barry, Courtney Berger, Wim Den Boer, Ted Boyse, Chris Broadhurst, Mary Carnahan, Matthew Michael Carnahan, Woody Carnahan, Leon Corcos, Cario Cordero, Christy Cordero, Sandy Cordero, Robert A. Ghanoujh, Richard Glasser, Ray Goto, Jolie Grazia, Michael Hague, Carol Hopkins, Alexandra Irvin, Nancy Lamarr, Dennis Lindsay, George Maguire, Ernie Marsten, Mary Ellen Marsten, Jodi Maxwell, Donald McGrath, Gavin O Connor, Greg O Connor, Evelyn O Neill, Mike Pimentel, Angie Raskin, Stacey Raskin, Philip Raskind, Stuart Rosenthal, Rhonda Silverstone, Guy Stodel, Glenn Takakjian, Victoria A. Zamora
Genres Crime, Drama, Mystery
Companies Paramount Pictures, Lions Gate Films, Cruise/Wagner Productions
Countries Germany, Canada, USA
Languages English, Spanish
ContentRating R
ImDbRating 7.1
ImDbRatingVotes 42050
MetacriticRating 70
Keywords suspended cop,investigation,police investigation,murder investigation,held at gunpoint