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To Live and Die in L.A. (1985)
The runaway success of the CBS crime drama C.S.I.
may finally win one of the1980s best thrillers the audience and respect its
always deserved. To Live And Die In L.A. introduced William Petersen, a superb
and criminally underrated actor, to the world. More than that, though, it brought a whole
different worldview to bear on the crime film. Michael Manns Heat,
to name just one example, is utterly indebted to TLADILA for its tone and its depiction of
Los Angeles as a wasteland where everyones got an angle and no one is incorruptible,
not even the purported hero.
Petersen plays Secret Service agent Richard Chance, whos on the
trail of master counterfeiter Rick Masters. Willem Dafoe plays Masters as more lizard than
man, utterly cool, never seeming to blink, even when hes using his girlfriend to
seduce down the door of a man he intends to kill for stealing from him. Its an
astonishing performance, and one that prefigures his entire career, even his take
on Jesus. (Before TLADILA, Dafoe had only appeared in Streets
Of Fire and a few other, small roles. On the DVD commentary, director William
Friedkin explains that he deliberately cast the film with relative unknowns, to allow the
characters to overtake their interpreters. It was a wise choice.)
As Chance gets closer and closer to Masters, he becomes obsessed with
the take-down, only partly because the counterfeiter murdered Chances partner. His
new partner, John Vukovich (John Pankow), is increasingly put off by Chances
recklessness and willingness to do seemingly anything to get his man. This is where
Friedkins bone-deep cynicism comes to the fore. As shown in his earlier films like The
French Connection, Cruising
and Sorcerer,
hes really not a director with a whole lot of nice things to say about humanity. A
story like this one, where literally every character seems to have a combination of
secrets and grudges separating him or her from every other character, is almost archetypal
Friedkin territory and he handles it masterfully. Action set-pieces (not just the infamous
wrong-way car chase, but a foot-race through LAX and a fiery fight scene) are brilliantly
blocked and shot, but never to the detriment of the unnerving unspooling of the
universally unsavory cast of characters.
The films greatest shock comes near the end, and naturally it
wont be revealed in this review. But whats even more disturbing, in the long
run, is the impact on the character of Vukovich, who had seemed like a moral man lost in a
wilderness of crime and vengeance. When, as the film oozes to a close, he seems just as
trapped as everyone around him, everyone hes tried to break away from for the
preceding 90 minutes, its as crushing a blow as has ever been delivered in film
noir.
The DVD edition of To Live And Die In L.A. presents the film
in a great, widescreen print, and features directors commentary, a latter-day
documentary about the making of the film (including interviews with cast members), and one
deleted scene, which wouldnt have added much and might, indeed, have detracted from
the films visceral impact.
- Phil Freeman