

Enforcing the law within the notoriously rough Brownsville section of the city and especially within the Van Dyke housing projects is the NYPD's sixty-fifth precinct. Three police officers struggle with the sometimes fine line between right and wrong.
Acting
Hawke's desperation, Cheadle's buried soul, Gere's hollowed-out ghost.
Direction
Fuqua dials Training Day vibes to eleven, Brooklyn edition.
Cinematography
Projects as purgatory, every frame claustrophobic and cruel.

Director
Antoine Fuqua
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Wesley Snipes filmed this during his tax evasion legal saga, making his imprisoned kingpin weirdly meta. The role was originally written for someone else entirely.
This was Fuqua's deliberate return to Training Day terrain after commercial misfires—he wanted to prove he could still go grimy. The film barely made back its budget despite the stacked cast.
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Reactions from the web
Totally underrated movie.
@ruslanandnolyudmila9611 64
This was a good movie. The three lead actors were excellent in their performances.
@jrewing1512 25
This movie shows who is truly the most noble and honorable of the three cops. Richard Gere is Brooklyn's Finest.
@Scoonertuna 16
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