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Early on, it does suck you in and spit you out, but it has less to do with Shelton's filmmaking than his use of the unforgettable and unforgiving footage of officers Timothy Wind, Theodore Briseno, Laurence Powell and Sergeant Stacey Koon beating King in March 1991. From there, the director leaps forward a year later to scenes of disheveled Sergeant Eldon Perry Jr. (Kurt Russell), the swaggering head of LAPD's Special Investigations Squad, swigging back Crown Royal in a seedy motel room while waiting for the jury's verdict. Then, we jump back five days earlier: Two thugs, Orchard (rapper Kurupt) and Sidwell (Dash Mihok), sit in a car arguing over the verdict; they're about to swipe an Asian grocer's safe and gun down four innocents in the process--all in a day's grisly work. Orchard bets Sidwell, his white partner, that the jury will let the cops walk; "bet you some pussy," he says, confident of the verdict.
It's into this firecracker atmosphere--one small boom in the suburbs, and the whole city's ready to go off--that Shelton begins recounting an achingly familiar tale. As it turns out, Perry is boozing it up in the motel room not because he's concerned about the impending conflagration, but because he's gotten himself into a real mess, the result of years of doing the dirty work of Jack Van Meter (Brendan Gleeson), a crooked chief who might as well be the grandson of L.A. Confidential's Dudley Smith. Perry, a loud and proud racist and homophobe, has been carrying Van Meter's water for too long, and now he's about to drown in it. He doesn't own up to his wretched past--killing the wrong man, say, to clear up Orchard and Sidwell's quadruple homicide at Van Meter's behest--till it gets him into trouble. He has no conscience, just an ass to cover. Unlike L.A. Confidential's Jack Vincennes, Perry has no interest in trying to remember why he became a cop.
Perry, we're told, is pretty much screwed from jump. Early in the film, he and his young partner Bobby Keough (Felicity's Scott Speedman, looking like a young Russell, before the rot has set in) sit before a shooting board. The chiefs are ready to clear Perry and Keough in the killing of a suspect, but the sole black officer on the board, Assistant Chief Holland (Ving Rhames), doesn't buy their story. He's ready to declare war on the pair, even if it means becoming an outcast in a racist department that would never stomach a black chief. If Speedman is the Ethan Hawke of this movie, the idealist whose partner destroys his romanticism about the nobility of police work, then Rhames is its Guy Pierce, the career officer who doesn't mind pissing down the ladder on the climb up.