Training Day
Denzel
Washington has been a good guy for most of his career. His performance
in Training Day, however, makes me wish he had always played bad, because when
he's bad he's outstanding.
In
Training Day, Washington's character, Detective Alonzo Harris, is a dirty
narcotics cop who takes a rookie (Ethan Hawke) under his wing. Harris picks and
chooses his collars; busting when he feels like it and rarely arresting anyone
but the biggest dogs. Even then, there has to be a good reason for someone to
go down. Harris smoothly moves in and out of various roles; training officer,
openly dirty cop, high roller in the legal world. The key aspect to Harris'
character is that he truly believes that he is a god. You see this when he
calmly crosses the street without looking for oncoming traffic as cars screech
to a halt to avoid crunching him, an evil grin on his face the entire time.
Hawke
plays the rookie naturally. If Harris wants him to smoke PCP, he smokes it with
a grin on his face, anger bubbling just beneath the surface. While Washington
plays the dirty cop to the extreme, with great finesse, Hawke's character falls
a bit flat due to the way he is written. His character is just too pat; he is
always moral, always vaguely questioning Harris' behavior. It would have been
better if he slipped just once. In a money "exchange" scene, when
Harris offers him a quarter of a million dollars, he doesn't even appear to be
mildly tempted. All good and all bad characters can be entertaining, and even
Harris has moments of tenderness, where just a bit of his old self shines
through.
Although
the entire movie revolves around careful characterization, there is actually a
plot that cleverly emerges near the end of the movie. It would spoil the movie
to reveal it, but let's just say that all of Harris' activities with the rookie
were never spontaneous. Harris engages in a game of chess, sliding his pieces
into place for an ambush at the end. When the pieces fall into place the entire
movie becomes more than just a chronicle of bad men doing bad things. He is
fascinating to watch, and I caught myself thinking at one point… “He's stealing
from drug dealers, murderers. Who cares?" You might wonder the same thing,
and these moral questions add depth to the film.
Training Day is
well directed, intelligently written, and keeps you hooked throughout the
entire film.
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