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24 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Above Average Thriller
Two veteran cops, Turk and Rooster (Robert De Niro, Al Pacino) work to solve a string of murders in which the victims are criminals that they have previously arrested and have been acquitted of their crimes. Something's seems a bit fishy, at least that's what two younger cops, Detectives Riley and Perez (Donnie Wahlberg, John Leguizamo) start to think. Furthermore, they...
Published on January 6, 2009 by Eric M. Milillo

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30 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Second DeNiro/Pacino Team-Up Is Good, But Could Have Better
Righteous Kill is only the second pairing of two of cinema's greatest actors - Robert De Niro and Al Pacino. Their first on-screen collaboration, only featured them together in a couple of scenes, and left the public wanting more.

Righteous Kill has them playing NYC detective partners who've been on the job for 30 years. A serial killer start killing...
Published on November 30, 2008 by Terence Allen


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24 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Above Average Thriller, January 6, 2009
This review is from: Righteous Kill (DVD)
Two veteran cops, Turk and Rooster (Robert De Niro, Al Pacino) work to solve a string of murders in which the victims are criminals that they have previously arrested and have been acquitted of their crimes. Something's seems a bit fishy, at least that's what two younger cops, Detectives Riley and Perez (Donnie Wahlberg, John Leguizamo) start to think. Furthermore, they suspect it's a cop. Anyway you splice it, the decorated members of the NYPD are looking for a killer. One who leaves a bit of poetry at every scene and happens to murder the filth of society that has slipped through the cracks of the judicial system.

"Righteous Kill" is only a slightly above average thriller given the big name talent. De Niro and Pacino both put forth great performances; De Niro as the hot headed, do whatever it takes to get a conviction cop and Pacino as a much calmer, honest detective. It seems a bit cliché, the whole good cop bad cop, but nonetheless it worked well and the duo's performances were very well balanced to convey not just an occupational partnership, but also a friendship. While the film will leave the audience thinking they know all the answers within the first twenty minutes, the plot does take some interesting turns.

It's great to see the two legendary actors are still performing. "Righteous Kill" is not completely predictable nor is it unwatchable. Give it a try.
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30 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Second DeNiro/Pacino Team-Up Is Good, But Could Have Better, November 30, 2008
By 
This review is from: Righteous Kill (DVD)
Righteous Kill is only the second pairing of two of cinema's greatest actors - Robert De Niro and Al Pacino. Their first on-screen collaboration, only featured them together in a couple of scenes, and left the public wanting more.

Righteous Kill has them playing NYC detective partners who've been on the job for 30 years. A serial killer start killing criminals who gotten off on technicalities. Soon, all the evidence points to the killer being a cop. And the cop would seem to be De Niro's character, Turk, a rough-edged type who isn't above falsifying evidence to convict suspects. He's balanced out by Pacino's Rooster, a calm, soothing influence on Turk in a relationship that seems as much like a marriage as it does a professional partnership. Added to the mix are John Leguizamo and Donnie Wahlberg as younger cops investigating the killings and Carlo Gugino as a forensic specialist in a relationship with DeNiro.

The movie works well as a police drama, less so as a mystery, although the solution of the killings does take some interesting turns. If two lesser actors were playing Turk and Rooster, the film might have been touted as asking interesting questions about the nature of friendships, partnerships, and romantic relationship amid all the stresses and strains of police work. But with De Niro and Pacino in tow, the viewer expects more, and doesn't necessarily get it with this film.

However, the two greats still know how to pull off great performance, and know how to elicit sympathy, affection, and every other possible emotion from an audience. Righteous Kill isn't a complete misfire, but might require a third teaming of these great actors.
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17 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing, January 11, 2009
This review is from: Righteous Kill [Blu-ray] (Blu-ray)
Seeing Al Pacino and Robert De Niro together on-screen is the kind of ultra-rare treat that could make any film worth seeing. That fact alone is the only reason that Righteous Kill is worth seeing in the very least, as both cinematic icons elevate what would be an otherwise dismal cop drama to something that is only instead a disappointing flick that isn't worthy of having Pacino and De Niro in the lead roles. Both play aging veteran cops who find themselves embroiled in a serial killer case in which there are some big implications, and the twisting screenplay ends up getting to the point of being purely incomprehensible, with a majority of the major story developments not being surprising in the least, and the choppy film editing doesn't help things either. Directed by Jon Avnet, who directed Pacino in the unbelievably bad 88 Minutes, Righteous Kill just ends up not being worthy of the immense talents of Pacino and De Niro, and sadly, both of whom just seem to be on autopilot here. Other actors from John Leguizamo, Donnie Wahlberg, Carla Gugino, Brian Dennehy, and Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson, are just wasted here in supporting roles. Still, seeing Pacino and De Niro on screen together for the first time since Heat is something special indeed, and makes the film worth seeing on its own. I f you're expecting another Heat however, or anything remotely close, you've definitely come to the wrong place.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not understanding the negative reviews, March 23, 2010
This review is from: Righteous Kill [Blu-ray] (Blu-ray)
As is often the case here, the reviews of this movie are all over the lot. I don't understand the negative ones at all. I watched this movie last night and thoroughly enjoyed it. After having watched the completely disappointing U-571 the night before, this was a particular treat. I give it high marks from top to bottom. The acting, as one would expect, is excellent, and I thought the story line was fascinating. Call me simple, but I was surprised at the ending. The blu-ray picture and sound were excellent. I've had this movie for a few weeks and had put off watching it because of all the negative and lukewarm reviews it has received. Everyone seems to have a different opinion of this movie. I thought it was great.
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11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Names are Just Names When You Are Past Your Prime, April 24, 2009
This review is from: Righteous Kill (DVD)
There is something amusing to me when people simply spit out famous actor's names and presume that means you are getting a good movie. For years, people bemoaned Pacino and De Niro didn't really have a scene to together in 'Heat,' so I suppose this is their remedy.

Ah, this film is a masterpiece. Two famous actors who have nothing left other than the relative fame of their names do what they do: act like De Niro and Pacino. For years, people have extolled the virtues of their respective movies but what nobody wants to admit is that Pacino and De Niro have played themselves for years. They don't really have any particular skill other than playing the same character over and over again.

Both men make the same faces they always make; Pacino requires a barking soliloquy at the end of each movie. De Niro's mouth turns down at the corners all the time. The acting is just silly; these are two overblown actors, at least a decade past their primes (likely more), together in a movie in the hope the combination of their respective names would somehow make these utterly unremarkable movie marketable.

You have to buy De Niro as virile enough to have Carla Gugino as a girlfriend and, in order to demonstrate his manliness, they have to show an elderly De Niro in various sexual poses which serve to disgust as opposed to convincing you he's a man of 'action.' If you survive the gag flex of those utterly unnecessary scenes, you get the reward of two actors acting for a paycheck. If you must watch this movie, get it from a library.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Great Actors; Ham-Fisted Plot, May 11, 2009
This review is from: Righteous Kill (DVD)
Righteous Kill / B0015OKWL2

*Spoilers*

I really wanted to like Righteous Kill. I love ambiguous morality dramas like The Brave One, and was looking forward to seeing the psychology behind a police vigilante - what motivates him (revenge? justice? protection? disgust? anger?) and whether or not we would agree with his motives, if not his methods. With Pacino and De Niro, I was sure I couldn't be disappointed. In the end, I was both right and wrong. I was disappointed with the movie, but not with the acting. It was the ham-fisted plot that did it for me.

The movie starts out, promisingly enough, with De Niro performing a voice-over, video-taped confession - explaining why he murdered his victims, what motivated him, how he chose them. We flash back to 'the beginning' and are treated to the stereotypical long standing cop-partnership: De Niro is the hot-head and Pacino is the mediator, calming him down and keeping him out of trouble. Pacino cleans up De Niro's messes and holds the deep tenderness and understanding that seems to characterize long marriages and cop partnerships.

As De Niro explodes repeatedly over various incidents ranging from disputed baseball plays and criminals walking free on court technicalities, the savvy movie goer begins to find themselves on the edge of a doubt. As De Niro sweats under the inquiring gaze of the other police officers and seems constantly on the verge of discovery, it hits us between the eyes that De Niro can't be the killer, because he's just too obvious a set-up. The voice-over confession, the constant raging temper, the internal investigation: all these are so blatant, obvious, and ham-fisted that we realize, long before we are supposed to, that the killer must be Pacino because, well, De Niro is just too obvious.

This is irritating. As an avid movie-watcher, I expect twists, sure, but the twist shouldn't be set-up so obvious that it's being shoved in your face. When the entire movie seems to be one long shout of "De Niro is the killer!! De Niro is the killer!!", then the movie-goer is forced to switch gears from the subtle intricacies of vigilantism and into the teeth-grinding, "Well, who is the REAL killer?" mode. Let's see, it can't be De Niro because he's too obvious. It can't be his girlfriend because she's there to be a sex object and a victim, and not anything so glamorous as The Killer. (Which is a shame, because it would have been an interesting twist, with Pacino thinking that De Niro is the killer and covering for him, only to find that he had misjudged his partner all this time.) Nope, it's got to be Pacino because he's a headline name and his character is charming and patient, which is an extremely suspicious thing to be in these sorts of movies.

After the viewer is slammed in the fact with the "twist" thirty minutes ahead of schedule, all interest is lost. The movie isn't really about exploring vigilantism, or delving into the psyche of someone who witnesses daily horrors - it's about finding out that Pacino is the real killer. Having already let that slip via the ham-fisted set-up of De Niro, there's nothing much left to do but let it grind down to the end.

This movie provides closed captions for the hearing impaired.

~ Ana Mardoll
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kept Me In Suspense, December 20, 2010
This review is from: Righteous Kill (DVD)
This movie kept me on the edge of my seat the entire time. The ending really suprised me. The cinematography could have been better, though.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Actually a Good Movie, Don't Worry About Negative Reviews, August 7, 2009
By 
Kyle (Orland Park, IL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Righteous Kill (DVD)
Al Pacino and De Niro are great in this film. I did not think the plot was predictable at all. See the entire movie before making opinions and you'll be in for a realistic crime thriller with a welcoming twist. The filming and camera work is nicely done. 5 stars is given due to the vast majority of low ratings. This movie is much better than 88 Minutes (also with Al Pacino). Definite rent if you like the genre or the actors.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars You Numb Nuts have to be joking!!, October 25, 2009
By 
MARCOLA (Somewhere in Time...) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Righteous Kill (DVD)
De Niro & Pacino were the movie they were awesome.
You people take movies way to serious, instead of trying
to enjoy them.
Non-stop action, suspence and had you goin one way and at the end
you find out you had it all backwards.
I give the movie a 5 of 5 stars.
If your a true fan of De Niro & Pacino you'll like it!!
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A Waste of Time and Money, January 18, 2009
This review is from: Righteous Kill (DVD)
Ah, I just couldn't wait to buy this movie - De Niro, Pacino! What could possibly go wrong? Answer: everything!

Take a bad script, add a narrator, and then throw in a few B-level actor wannabes and you have a disaster on film. This movie is so predictable and boring that I can only imagine Robert and Al were heavily medicated for head colds when they agreed to take lead roles in this project.

If it had been any other actors, this movie would have been stopped in the middle of production. However, many people actually give this movie high ratings, here at Amazon.com, because they know the amazing track record for the two big leaguers! And I truly can't blame them for that. Pacino or De Niro sitting in a rocking chair for thirty minutes would probably be a bit interesting, because these two have that IT factor.

Two very old, white, NYPD detectives fall under every single cliché ever invented about cops. Then they work out in the police weight training room, shoot lots of bullets at targets, talk trash, brag on each other, fight with the younger cops, stand up to the black street thug, and along the way discover they have a vigilante in their midst; wow, how will the audience ever handle the suspense. Easy, there is none. In fact, there really isn't a single character in this movie who I found myself rooting for to succeed. I was actually hoping they all got shot! Sorry, just being brutally honest; everyone seemed corrupt, arrogant, and void of any good human qualities.

Righteous Kill is one of those movies that everyone hoped would live up to the hype. But when you rely on a cool musical soundtrack and two great movie stars to carry the whole project, you are going to create a mess. And that is exactly the best way to describe this movie: A MESS.

And CASTING DIRECTORS, please stop putting 50 Cent in movies! He should not even be an extra in a film. He cannot act! He's not even good enough to convince an audience he is a rapper, and he is.

Don't believe the hype. Save your money and 101 minutes of your time.

Want suspense and characters you care about? Watch Bangkok Dangerous! Now that's a script!

See ya next review!
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Righteous Kill [Blu-ray]
Righteous Kill [Blu-ray] by Jon Avnet (Blu-ray - 2009)
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