Urban Justice

Urban Justice

DVD cover
Directed by Don E. Fauntleroy
Produced by Steven Seagal
Written by Gilmar Fortis II
Starring
Music by Peter Meisner
Cinematography Don E. Fauntleroy
Edited by Scott Conrad
Production
company
Distributed by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Release dates
  • November 13, 2007 (2007-11-13)
Running time
96 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Urban Justice (released in the United Kingdom as Renegade Justice) is a 2007 American action film directed by Don E. Fauntleroy and produced by Steven Seagal, who also starred in the lead role. Eddie Griffin and Carmen Serano co-star. The film was released direct-to-DVD in the United States on November 13, 2007.

Plot

In Los Angeles, two rival gangs war with each other: the Hyde Park Gang, led by El Chivo, and the East Side Gangsters, led by Armand Tucker. Vice cop Max Ballister receives a call he assumes to be from his informant, Gary Morrison. Max leaves a romantic dinner with his wife and is gunned down. Max's angry father, Simon, a martial arts expert who is implied to be ex-CIA, moves to the neighborhood in which Max died and begins investigating. His landlady, Alice Park, who also runs a liquor store, aids him. The others do not know that the investigating cop, Frank Shaw, has formed a partnership with Tucker.

As Simon investigates, he leaves a trail of beaten and dead gangsters. Gary gives Simon a lead on El Chivo, who runs most of the booking joints that Max went after. At his private club, El Chivo suggests that Tucker ordered the hit on Max. A pair of East Side Gangsters chase Simon via car, and Simon causes them to crash. One gangster dies, and Simon interrogates the other, Gary's brother Isaiah Morrison, who says Tucker sent them. Isaiah talks to Tucker, and Tucker threatens to kill everyone Isaiah cares about unless he kills Simon. The next morning, Simon saves Gary from a group of racists. Simon asks him if Isaiah was Max's killer, but Gary does not respond. As Gary leaves, Simon plants a tracking device on him.

Simon tracks Gary to a warehouse and uses electronic equipment to eavesdrop on his conversation, a meeting between the gangs. After Simon plants more tracking devices, he hears Shaw and a sudden burst of gunfire. When it is over, Chivo's gang is dead at the hands of dirty cops in the employ of Shaw; Tucker and Shaw take the drugs and money. Simon tracks them to another warehouse, breaks in, and finds their cocaine. Tucker's men follow Simon back to Park's liquor store, where Simon has an apartment. Using his tracking device, Simon notices they are outside and tells Alice to hide. When they break in, Simon kills them and escorts Alice outside past more gangsters, whom he kills. Tucker shoots Simon and escapes, and Alice takes Simon to her cousin, Winston, who works at USC Medical center.

The next day, Simon goes to Isaiah's and Gary's house, beats Isaiah up, and finds the murder weapon. When Gary returns home, Simon forces him to admit that Shaw is behind everything, including Max's murder. Gary explains that he was afraid to talk and that Shaw killed Max because he witnessed a deal between Shaw and Tucker. Later that night, Shaw and Tucker meet with a drug dealer from New York at a warehouse. As Simon arrives and begins killing gangsters, Shaw kills the New York drug dealer. After killing all of Tucker's and Shaw's men, Simon confronts Shaw. As Simon chokes Shaw to death, Tucker walks in with a gun and watches despite Shaw's orders to open fire. Simon disarms Tucker and turns the gun on him, but he lets Tucker go, saying that he has no beef with him. Simon hands back the gun and leaves, impressing Tucker with his cool demeanor.

Cast

Release

Sony Pictures Home Entertainment released Urban Justice on DVD in the US on November 13, 2007.[1]

Reception

Nathan Rabin of The Dissolve wrote, "Urban Justice is a sublimely ridiculous exercise in unintentional self-parody, a so-bad-it’s-good romp highly recommended to Seagal fans and detractors alike."[2] Hock Teh of IGN rated it 5/10 and recommended it Seagal fans only.[3] Ian Jane of DVD Talk rated it 3/5 stars and wrote that "the film is entertaining if you don't mind turning your brain off".[1] David Johnson of DVD Verdict rated it 58/100 and wrote that the film has poor acting and fight scenes.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 Jane, Ian (2007-11-01). "Urban Justice". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2015-05-16.
  2. ↑ Rabin, Nathan (2014-05-23). "In Urban Justice, Steven Seagal is out for vaguely racist vengeance". The Dissolve. Retrieved 2015-05-16.
  3. ↑ Teh, Hock (2007-11-02). "Urban Justice DVD Review". IGN. Retrieved 2015-05-16.
  4. ↑ Johnson, David (2007-11-06). "Urban Justice". DVD Verdict. Retrieved 2015-05-16.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.