Dog Watch (1996) – John Langley.
This gritty 90s DTV crime thriller has beautiful Sam Elliott, and was released by Nuimage, so I'm all over it like shrill, knee-jerk reactions on social media. I would have sat through this rotten cop flick, even with Pauly Shore and Orlando Bloom in it, insightfully, they cast goodly Thespians Esai Morales, and Goombah supreme Paul Sorvino. Plaintive sax over prosaic title sequences is most righteous, and don't let anyone tell y'all any different! As a bonus, Dog Watchers offers the brief opportunity to play the 'Hey!!!! it's that cool-looking Asian guy from 'blah', what's his name again, dude!!!???' Nuimage always dictates a bloody convenience store shoot-out, narratively superfluous, but B-Movie lore, guy!!! Dog Watch ain't smart, and it's routinely dumb, but at no point was I bored watching the hyper-bellicose cop Charlie Falon (Elliot) TCB like a bloody boss!
The text is recycled wrong cop shinola, but Lennie Niehaus's moody score, and Mr Elliott's extraordinary charisma prove magnetic. I could have done without the mummified, mismatched May/December cop jazz, but, what the hey!!!!??? Hollyweird still has a major hard-on for it, so what can ya' do???? The abundance of bloody squibs, stabbings, and gnarly haymaker fisticuffs endows Dog Watch with additional chutzpah. One of Sam Elliott's more Promethean talents is his ability to rejuvenate stock dialogue, so whatever they paid him, it clearly wasn't enough! Dog Watch delivers enough B-Movie bite to maintain interest, but I can imagine those not so predisposed to schlocky crime pics may not share my positive reading. Dog Watch ain't no one's idea of a pedigree cop shoot 'em up, call me sentimental, but I still have a soft spot for mutts!































