DVD Review: Joe Carnahan’s Narc on Paramount Home Video

Joe Carnahan’s genre pic gets an equally nifty sound and video transfer on this DVD edition.

Narc“Video killed the radio star” is how The Buggles welcomed in MTV’s music revolution, but it could also be applied to the cinema as well: video killed the genre film. Thirty years ago movies weren’t afraid to be small. Now, if anything is less than epic or doesn’t feature a $20 million marquee idol it’s automatically labeled an “art-house” film, a tough sell to the masses, and frequently it’s shipped off to home video or the newest step in the de-evolution of cinema, cable TV. Joe Carnahan’s Narc is exactly the kind of genre film that would seem appropriate on the small screen—gritty, violent and with a permanent chill that doesn’t invite an easy rapport with its questionable heroes. But the fact that it’s getting a theatrical release (with a push from Paramount) is cause for celebration, as it shames nearly every other action spectacular/thriller/wannabe tough-guy movie in recent memory. Carnahan’s only previous feature was the little-seen indie Blood, Guts, Bullets and Octane, but Narc is definitive proof that he’s a talent to be reckoned with—he works with a rough-hewn classicism that recalls the tenacity and resilience of Hollywood in its glory days.

The film stars Jason Patric as Nick Tellis, a former narc who was booted from the force after accidentally shooting a pregnant woman during a bust. Called back in after 18 months, reinstatement is dangled over his head if he will explore the shooting of another narc who operated in the same territory. At first he only agrees to sift through a stack of reports, but it’s not long before the street beckons him back to active duty and he is united with the dead cop’s former partner Henry Oak (Ray Liotta, whose intense, muscular performance makes the character’s name all too literal). Narc is ultimately less interested in the whos and whys of their investigation than what it means to both men, singling out the personal facets of day-to-day police work. For Tellis, it’s a way to redeem his mistakes, even if it means leaving his wife and infant son crying at home. For Oak, a known hothead who’d just as soon shoot a suspect as arrest him, it’s a way of claiming vengeance—though he knows more about his partner’s death than he initially lets on, and vengeance is only a means to cover up his inability to cope with the blamelessness of the truth.

As stark and cold as its wintry Detroit backdrop (it’s somewhat disappointing to learn that the film was actually filmed in Toronto), Narc earns comparison 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. Violence is used as punctuation more than plot points—the breathtaking French Connection car chase is rivaled by a jaw-dropping foot chase at Narc’s outset—and the film often strips away the bluster of Tellis and Oak’s investigation to hang back with them in pensive flashes of vulnerability most films forget about.

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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. For all of the film’s edgy brawn, it’s a sign of Carnahan’s maturity as a filmmaker that he allows his main character such hushed moments of introspection. Narc comes up just shy of greatness (its lack of a solid conclusion leaves it hanging a bit too much), and its indie-scaled standards mean it may take a while for it to catch on—those looking for another dumb action movie will be left wanting. But it has the sort of tense grandeur that’s often a sign of enduring genre classics, and sooner or later it will get its due. The decisive irony, though, is that such dues will likely be paid as Narc gains its following on home video.

Image/Sound

Paramount Home Entertainment presents Narc in its original 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen on this DVD edition of the film. Because Joe Carnahan shot so much of the film on-the-fly and with varying film stocks and lighting techniques, the transfer is a little inconsistent. At worst, though, edge enhancement is only barely noticeable throughout. Otherwise, blacks are good, skin tones are warm, and shadow delineation is excellent. The Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround track is surprisingly aggressive and there’s no difficulty in making out the film’s dialogue.

Extras

Joe Carnahan and his editor John Gilroy provide one of the more consistently engaging commentary tracks around on this DVD edition of Narc. Besides relating requisite behind-the-scenes stories (for example: a stunt man shot the film’s jittery opener because he was the only one fast enough to catch up to Jason Patric), Carnahan proves to be an agreeable jokester throughout. Three aptly titled featurettes (“Making The Deal,” “Shooting Up” and “The Visual Trip”) explore the film’s thematic and visual complexities and feature interviews from Carnahan and the likes of William Friedken and executive producers Tom Cruise and Paula Wagner. Carnahan is a major crime buff and on “Making The Deal” (the best of the three featurettes) reveals the film’s connections to Errol Morris’s The Thin Blue Line. Also included here is a lovely featurette where Friedken is allowed to jerk-off to Carnahan, the film’s theatrical trailer and previews for The Italian Job, Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life, Timeline, The Hunted and The Core.

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Overall

Joe Carnahan’s genre pic gets an equally nifty sound and video transfer on this DVD edition.

Score: 
 Cast: Jason Patric, Ray Liotta, Anne Openshaw, Busta Rhymes, Chi McBride  Director: Joe Carnahan  Screenwriter: Joe Carnahan  Distributor: Paramount Home Video  Running Time: 105 min  Rating: R  Year: 2002  Release Date: June 17, 2003  Buy: Video, Soundtrack

Chuck Rudolph

Chuck Rudolph founded Matinee Magazine in 1999. He lives in Boynton Beach, Florida.

Ed Gonzalez

Ed Gonzalez is the co-founder of Slant Magazine. A member of the New York Film Critics Circle, his writing has appeared in The Village Voice, The Los Angeles Times, and other publications.

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