Blu-ray Review: Curtis Hanson’s L.A. Confidential on Warner Home Video

The film remains one of the best neo-noirs of the ’90s and a fine example of classical Hollywood storytelling.

L.A. ConfidentialCurtis Hanson’s L.A. Confidential is a throwback in nearly every way: in setting, in style, in performance, in storytelling. Based on James Ellroy’s absurdly sprawling novel, the film—easily Hanson’s best (hell, it’s his only good one, really—condenses the novel’s unfilmable narrative into a comparatively straightforward tale of drugs, murder and the ethical morass in which the film’s cops and criminals find themselves.

The audience’s entry point into the whole mess is Ed Exley (Guy Pearce), a self-righteous, politically astute young officer who must reconcile his code of behavior with reality while investigating the murders of several people—including an ex-detective—at a local coffee shop. The dark side of police work is embodied by two detectives Exley works with in the investigation: Bud White (Russell Crowe), a tortured lug whose methods frequently cross the line into brutality, and Jack Vincennes (Kevin Spacey), an advisor on a popular cop show who long ago sold out his badge making celebrity arrests for the editor of a sleazy tabloid (Danny DeVito).

The film’s undeniable pull can be attributed to both its traditionally gripping narrative—which expands to include the head of a porn empire (David Strathairn), the corrupt police chief (James Cromwell) and White’s relationship with a high-class prostitute (Kim Basinger, failing to embarrass herself and winning an Oscar for the effort)—and to how it maps out the ways in which its heroes adjust their moral codes.

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L.A. Confidential understands that men don’t always respond to evil with good and that the question of whom society regards as heroes isn’t always a clear cut as it seems. But while Brian Helgeland’s screenplay, like so much neo-noir, seeks to expose the seedy underbelly of the glamour of Los Angeles in the 1950s, the film’s shiny Hollywood surfaces too frequently weaken its intentions. The filmmaking is competent and engaging but middlebrow, and Dante Spinotti’s cinematography is striking but too clean to achieve Chinatown-level subversion. And the film’s conclusion, with Bud showing up in an uplifting last-minute reveal, is so falsely sunny that it very nearly undermines the film’s up-to-that-point admirable sense of darkness and moral confusion.

Image/Sound

A huge improvement over the fuzzy 1998 release, the two-disc special edition features a razor-sharp video transfer. Although black levels get a little muddy on a few night scenes, the image quality is more or less impeccable from start to finish. Audio is solid but unspectacular; with the exception of the climactic shootout, there’s nothing really here to show off your sound system.

Extras

The commentary track has been obviously and awkwardly assembled from separately recorded interviews, so there’s no sense of continuity or conversation between the participants. On disc two, a wide array of featurettes look back on the production and release of the film. Based around interviews with cast and crew (and critic Andrew Sarris, who nuttily prefers L.A. Confidential to Chinatown), the featurettes are more in-depth than most supplementary documentaries. Other special features include an interactive map of the film’s Los Angeles and trailers.

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Overall

Curtis Hanson’s best movie may not be the American masterpiece many think, but it remains one of the best neo-noirs of the ’90s and a fine example of classical Hollywood storytelling.

Score: 
 Cast: Kevin Spacey, Russell Crowe, Guy Pearce, Kim Basinger, James Cromwell, Danny DeVito, David Strathairn, Ron Rifkin, Graham Beckel, Darrell Sandeen, Simon Baker  Director: Curtis Hanson  Screenwriter: Brian Helgeland  Distributor: Warner Home Video  Running Time: 138 min  Rating: R  Year: 1997  Release Date: September 23, 2008  Buy: Video, Soundtrack, Book

Matt Noller

Matthew Noller is a senior associate in the Sacramento office of King & Spalding and a member of the firm’s Government Matters practice.

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