Harrison: Cry of the City

1996
6.1| 1h40m| en
Details

Harrison is an ex-Scotland yard detective hired to save an ex-convict accused of killing a New York cop. Harrison prowls the Big Apple by day and night seeking the answers to his mysterious case, but more importantly the answer to the question "Why isn't the New York Police Department investigating the case?"

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Reviews

Tedfoldol everything you have heard about this movie is true.
Teringer An Exercise In Nonsense
Dana An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.
Billy Ollie Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable
Fosdyke A fascinating made for TV film, with lots of references that have a running theme of British humour. Woodward always attempts to underplay his parts, in this I feel he succeeds.Faced with hostility, animosity and many other ity's from the local Police investigators.. he accepts a case working for Helen Lovett (Cynthia Harris) as a private investigator, on behalf of Octavio Ruiz (Robert Montano) an obvious criminal stereotype.Maybe I was swayed by the inclusion of 'Teddys' daughter, played by that beautiful suave Brit Elizabeth Hurley. A delightful interplay as father and daughter between the two is woven into the plot.Maybe a little over long, someone did suggest it may have been made as a pilot episode, but for a TV film it still gives reasonable value for money.
Robert J. Maxwell It's too bad about this movie. It promises much more than it delivers. The plot ought to be interesting but isn't. The story progresses from scene to scene, sometimes outdoors (the picture was shot partly in New York)and sometimes indoors. But it doesn't matter. Each scene is flatly layed out and consists of a conversation between Harrison, a retired Scotland Yard cop, and somebody else, usually some street crumb. The dialogue has no lilt. There is no humor, except in the occasional wisecrack from Edward Woodward as the cop, and sometimes the wisecracks overreach themselves. Woodward himself is adequate. If you close your eyes he begins to sound like Michael Caine. Alas, he's given nothing to work with here. And he gave an astonishing performance in "The Wicker Man," a terrifying and mythologically informed film that's not to be missed. Even Elizabeth Hurley's presence can't justify watching this. She's mesmerizingly beautiful, true, a kind of darker, more BRUNETTE Jacqueline Bisset, without the incredible eyes. Hurley is Woodward's daughter, about to be married to a cop who resents Woodward's intrusion into the prosecution of a cop killer. And if his future son-in-law protests Woodward's nosiness, the kid's colleagues are positively hostile, sometimes physically so. On the whole the film runs like the pilot for a TV series that was never produced. What a waste.

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