Director and writer Shane Black's throwback to 70's style buddy cop comedies is a retro, hilarious joy that benefits from its two leads.
Ryan Gosling and Russel Crowe play two detectives in the late 70's brought together by a case surrounding a missing girl and find that there may be more to the case than whats known. It's a basic set up for a buddy cop movie but what more would you expect from the man who wrote Lethal Weapon and Kiss Kiss Bang Bang. Director and writer Shane Black has a knack for the old throwback buddy movies and again his brilliance shines through here both with his writing and his two stars.
Russel Crowe plays Jackson Healey, an enforcer who gets the job done by any means necessary, and Ryan Gosling plays Holland March, a former police officer turned private detective who has a bit of troubled past. Both actors real life personalities come through these characters as Crowe can sometimes be a violent jerk and Gosling a lovable idiot. Each man's crazy balances out the others. Compairing it to one of Black's first films, the duo resembles a little of Riggs and Murtaugh. Healey and March are not total opposites but their personalities do clash when it comes to their work and when it shows it makes for some great comedy.
And while Gosling and Crowe give great performances, for me the show stealing performance came from Angourine Rice who plays March's daughter Holly. This is a strong and determined kid character who is sort of the middle ground for both men. While she could have easily been a burden and annoying she instead is motivated and sympathetic. She, in my opinion, is the heart of the movie. Her character goes through a lot as her dad has fallen on hard times and is not the adult he needs to be but she still sticks with him because she knows he loves her and wants the best for her. In the end, she ends up affecting both men's way of life and changing them and that too me shows that her character was vital to the story.
The Nice Guys is a great neo-noir buddy cop movie that should satisfy both casual movie goers and fans of the genres.
Grade: A
Ryan Gosling and Russel Crowe play two detectives in the late 70's brought together by a case surrounding a missing girl and find that there may be more to the case than whats known. It's a basic set up for a buddy cop movie but what more would you expect from the man who wrote Lethal Weapon and Kiss Kiss Bang Bang. Director and writer Shane Black has a knack for the old throwback buddy movies and again his brilliance shines through here both with his writing and his two stars.
Russel Crowe plays Jackson Healey, an enforcer who gets the job done by any means necessary, and Ryan Gosling plays Holland March, a former police officer turned private detective who has a bit of troubled past. Both actors real life personalities come through these characters as Crowe can sometimes be a violent jerk and Gosling a lovable idiot. Each man's crazy balances out the others. Compairing it to one of Black's first films, the duo resembles a little of Riggs and Murtaugh. Healey and March are not total opposites but their personalities do clash when it comes to their work and when it shows it makes for some great comedy.
And while Gosling and Crowe give great performances, for me the show stealing performance came from Angourine Rice who plays March's daughter Holly. This is a strong and determined kid character who is sort of the middle ground for both men. While she could have easily been a burden and annoying she instead is motivated and sympathetic. She, in my opinion, is the heart of the movie. Her character goes through a lot as her dad has fallen on hard times and is not the adult he needs to be but she still sticks with him because she knows he loves her and wants the best for her. In the end, she ends up affecting both men's way of life and changing them and that too me shows that her character was vital to the story.
The Nice Guys is a great neo-noir buddy cop movie that should satisfy both casual movie goers and fans of the genres.
Grade: A
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