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description: Bad Lieutenant is a 1992 American neo-noir crime drama film directed by Abel Ferrara. The film stars Harvey Keitel as the titular "bad lieutenant". The screenplay was written by actress-model Zoë Lun ...
Bad Lieutenant is a 1992 American neo-noir crime drama film directed by Abel Ferrara. The film stars Harvey Keitel as the titular "bad lieutenant". The screenplay was written by actress-model Zoë Lund, who also plays a small role in the film. Lund had been discovered by Ferrara and had starred in his earlier film, Ms. 45.
Songs:

01 Sink Or Swim《Sink Or Swim》124
02 Head Into Tomorrow《Never Cry Ano..》66
03 Shine Like The Sun《Never Cry Ano..》112
04 Running Out Of Luck《Never Cry Ano..》97
05 Runaway《Never Cry Ano..》109
06 This Is Home《Never Cry Ano..》50
07 Summer Days On Holi..《Never Cry Ano..》55
08 Sink Or Swim(Remi.. 《Sink Or Swim》47
09 Dynamo《Sink Or Swim》81


Click the second button to play music

 

The film was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1992 Cannes Film Festival.[2]

Plot

In The Bronx, the Lieutenant drops his two sons off at Catholic school. After they leave the car, and before he drives to work, the Lieutenant takes a few small bumps of cocaine. His first case is a double murder. He wanders away from the scene to get some coffee, and across the street, he watches a petty thief rifling through the trunks of parked cars, which the Lieutenant ignores. He approaches a group of drug dealers, who run off as he approaches. The Lieutenant follows one dealer into an apartment building and up the stairs. The dealer waits for him in the hallway, and the Lieutenant gives him a bag of drugs from a crime scene. The Lieutenant quickly smokes some crack, and then sets aside a portion of the drugs for himself. The thief promises to give him the money he makes from selling the drugs in a few days. At an apartment, the Lieutenant gets drunk and engages in a threesome with two women. Meanwhile, a nun is raped in a church by two young hoodlums.

The next morning, the Lieutenant is passed out on the couch in his home as his two young daughters watch TV. His family comes to the table for breakfast, and he stirs. He immediately flips the TV to see the results of a National League Championship Series between the Mets and the Dodgers. Realizing he has lost his bet, he stumbles out of the house. He tries to win back his money by doubling his wager on the next game in the series. The Mets have lost the first three games, and he is certain that the Dodgers will win again. At another crime scene, the Lieutenant rifles through the car and finds some drugs which he stashes in his suit jacket. However, he is too impaired to secure the drugs, and they fall out onto the street. His colleagues look at him in horror, and he tries to play it off by instructing them to enter the drugs into evidence.

At the hospital, the Lieutenant spies on the nun's examination by the doctors, who explain that the two boys also raped her with objects like a crucifix. Later that evening, he pulls over two teenage girls from New Jersey who are using their father's car without his knowledge to go to a club. Without proper licenses, he forces one of the girls to strip and the other to simulate fellatio while he masturbates.

The next day, at the church, the Lieutenant listens in on the nun's deposition; she is silent as the police ask her about the identities of her assailants. He leaves and is seen drinking and driving while listening to the final moments of the next game in the pennant series. When the Dodgers lose, he shoots out his car stereo. During the First Communion of one of his children, we learn as he converses with a friend that his wager now stands at $30,000, more than he can afford to pay. Nonetheless, he doubles his wager on the series.

The Lieutenant eavesdrops on the nun's confession. She says she has no animosity toward her attackers, and sees the attack as an opportunity for God's grace to be bestowed on them. The Lieutenant drinks in a bar while the Dodgers lose to the Mets. He wanders out into the street, then a nightclub, where he scores more cocaine. In a bar, he tries to double his bet on the series yet again. His friend refuses to make the wager, insisting that the bookie would kill him for nothing, and it would be suicidal to owe him $120,000. The Lieutenant is unwavering in his belief that the Mets cannot win the series, and he appears to identify with Darryl Strawberry.

Continuing his drug use, the Lieutenant picks up his $30,000 share from the drug dealer who sold the evidence he had stolen. He then calls the bookie personally to place the bet; the bookie says he will think about taking it. The Lieutenant visits a woman (Zoë Tamerlis Lund), and does heroin with her. She delivers a monologue about vampires.

The Lieutenant drives to the church where the nun was raped and finds her kneeling in prayer before the altar. In a near-stupor from his drinking and drug use, he tells her that if she will identify her attackers, he will give her justice—i.e., that he will kill them for her. She repeats that she has forgiven them already then gets up and leaves the lieutenant alone on his knees at the altar. The lieutenant suffers an emotional breakdown. He sees the crucified Christ standing in the aisle of the church and tearfully curses him before confessing his own weakness and begging forgiveness for his crimes. He crawls to the figure before him and kisses the bloody feet only to look up and see a woman holding a gold chalice. The woman tells him that the two rapists pawned the chalice at her husband's store.

The Lieutenant then tracks down the two rapists and cuffs them together. He holds them at gunpoint and then has them light a crack pipe which he then smokes with them as they watch the Mets make their historic comeback and win the pennant. Instead of booking the two rapists, he takes them to the Port Authority and puts them on a bus with the cigar box containing the $30,000. He insists that they take the bus and never come back to New York City. After he leaves the terminal, he parks on the street in front of Penn Station. Another car drives up beside him, and a voice yells, "Hey, cop!" before two shots ring out. The film closes as bystanders gather around the car, realizing that the Lieutenant has been murdered.
Cast

    Harvey Keitel as The Lieutenant           
    Victor Argo as Beat Cop
    Paul Calderón as Cop #1
    Eddie Daniels as Jersey Girl (passenger)
    Bianca Hunter as Jersey Girl (driver)
    Zoë Lund as Zoe
    Vincent Laresca as J.C.
    Frankie Thorn as The Nun
    Fernando Véléz as Julio
    Joseph Micheal Cruz as Paulo
    Paul Hipp as Jesus

    

    Frank Adonis as Large
    Anthony Ruggiero as Lite
    Victoria Bastel as Bowtay
    Leonard Thomas as Cop #2
    Peggy Gormley as Lieutenant's wife
    Stella Keitel as Lieutenant's daughter
    Brian McElroy and Frankie Acciato as Lieutenant's sons

Alternate versions
[icon]     This section requires expansion with: a description of what was specifically cut from the film. (July 2013)

Originally rated NC-17 and one of the few films to be rated such with drug use cited as one of the main reasons (the only other film being Comfortably Numb), the unedited cut was described for "sexual violence, strong sexual situations and dialogue, graphic drug use".

Blockbuster and Hollywood Video, the largest video rental companies in the United States, had a policy prohibiting the purchase and rental of NC-17 films. An R-rated cut was created specifically so that Blockbuster and the other retailers would rent and purchase out the film. The R-rated cut was described with "drug use, language, violence, and nudity".
Reception

Bad Lieutenant has a 77% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with 30 positive reviews out of 39. Writing in the New York Times, Janet Maslin praised Ferrara's talent for making "gleefully down-and-dirty films", continuing, "He has come up with his own brand of supersleaze, in a film that would seem outrageously, unforgivably lurid if it were not also somehow perfectly sincere."[3] Desson Howe called the Lieutenant "a notch nicer than Satan" in the Washington Post, and he cites Keitel's work as the film's saving grace, "It is only the strength of Keitel's performance that gives his personality human dimension.".[4]

Mark Kermode has mentioned that the film was praised as "a powerful tale of redemptive Catholicism".[5] Roger Ebert stated that "in the Bad Lieutenant, Keitel has given us one of the great screen performances in recent years".[6] Martin Scorsese named this movie as the fifth best movie of the 1990s.[7]
Sequel

An unrelated follow-up, The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call - New Orleans, was released in 2009, seventeen years following the first film's release. The film was directed by Werner Herzog and described as being "neither a sequel nor a remake."[8] Both films were produced by Edward R. Pressman.

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