Code of Silence (1985 film)

Code of Silence is a 1985 American action film directed by Andrew Davis, and starring Chuck Norris, Henry Silva, Dennis Farina and Molly Hagan. The film was released in the United States on May 3, 1985.[1]

Code of Silence
Promotional movie poster for the film
Directed byAndrew Davis
Produced byRaymond Wagner
Screenplay by
Story by
  • Michael Butler
  • Dennis Shryack
Starring
Music byDavid Michael Frank
CinematographyFrank Tidy
Edited byChristopher Holmes
Peter Parasheles
Russ Kingston
Distributed byOrion Pictures
Release date
  • May 3, 1985 (1985-05-03)
Running time
101 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$7 Million
Box office$20,345,561

It was an atypical film for Norris, whose previous ones had been known more for his martial-arts skill. A crime drama, it was filmed on location in Chicago with a few sub-plots. It features Norris as Sgt. Eddie Cusack, a streetwise plainclothes officer who takes down a crime czar responsible for officers being wounded in a botched drug raid. In the film's climax, Norris teams with a crime-fighting robot named "Prowler."

Dennis Farina was an actual Chicago police officer during the making of this film, moonlighting before becoming a full-time actor when cast in the leading role of Michael Mann's 1986 television series, Crime Story.

Davis said the film "made a lot of money and I got pegged as an action director."[2]

Plot

October 17, 1984: It is late morning in Chicago's Uptown neighborhood where a sting operation is taking place. Sergeant Eddie Cusack (Chuck Norris) and his crack team of Chicago Police detectives take their positions, including Lieutenant Kobas (Joseph Kosala), stationed on a rooftop with Detectives Brennan (Ron Dean) and Music (Gene Barge) as lookouts, along with alcoholic Detective Cragie (Ralph Foody) and rookie Nick Kopalas (Joseph Guzaldo) in a cemetery. An undercover informant is about to meet a buyer at an 'L (or "el")' train stop. Cusack and his partner Dorato (Dennis Farina) use a garbage truck to patrol beneath the train tracks.

The carefully orchestrated sting is a basic meet-and-greet exchange set up by cocaine supplier Victor Comacho (Ron Henriquez). Victor is the younger brother of Luis Comacho (Henry Silva), leader of a vicious drug gang known as the Comachos. Everything goes horribly wrong when a rival gang led by mafia drug lord Tony Luna (Mike Genovese) infiltrates the sting as a crew of painters and mercilessly guns down the attendees. After money and cocaine are exchanged, the aftermath is grim; Cusack's informant is dead and Dorato is wounded. Kopalas is also eyewitness as Cragie accidentally guns down a teenager, then plants his backup weapon on the victim.

Kopalas is partnered with Cusack, with Cragie put on desk duty until a department hearing. Commander Kates (Bert Remsen) expresses disgust with the outcome of the sting, while Cusack notes that the Comachos won't take the hit on their gang lightly. Kates agrees. He releases Eddie with one warning: "Find who burned the Comachos before they do."

After learning that one of his gang members was shot by police, and that Victor Comacho survived, Tony Luna decides to leave town. He asks Lou Gamiani (Lou Damiani) to have someone guard his daughter, Diana Luna (Molly Hagan), a young artist. Gamiani feels he has put the entire outfit at risk.

Apart from breaking in a new partner, and the introduction of the new Prowler police three-axle robot, Cusack is shunned by other officers for his refusal to sign a petition to have Cragie cleared. He bluntly tells Brennan: "If Cragie doesn't get off the streets, he's gonna kill somebody else, or get somebody killed."

Tailing Gamiani to the Lincoln Park Zoo, the detectives witness a tense exchange between him and Diana. Cusack discovers who Diana's father is. He and Kopalas stake out the Luna residence as the Comacho funeral procession comes through the neighborhood. They visit Tony Luna's uncle, Felix Scalese (Nathan Davis), to request he stop the imminent conflict.

Responding to a DOA call in Lincoln Park, Brennan and Music identify the victim, who had been given a "Colombian Necktie", as Tony Luna's bag man. Brennan notes another call to Luna's restaurant, where the officers found the mutilated owner hanging from a meat hook. A car lot run by Tony Luna is firebombed and the owner burned alive. A vicious gang war has begun.

Posing as food vendors, the Comachos brutally gun down every member of the Luna household. Cusack, knowing they will go after Diana to bring Luna out of hiding, tries to get to her first. Gamiani is stabbed to death. Cusack and Kopalas arrive on the scene. Cusack takes off after Diana, who is being chased by several Comacho gang members. In an alley. Cusack surprises them at gunpoint. One takes Diana hostage with a knife, but Cusack disarms the three remaining suspects and goes after the one with the girl. He follows them to the Randolph/Wells (CTA) elevated station and boards a train. A standoff ensues, leading to a fight on the roof of the eight-car train. At a bridge crossing, the gang member jumps into the Chicago River, where he is run over by a speedboat.

Cusack then places Diana in a safe house with his old friend Pirelli (Allen Hamilton), a retired Chicago police officer who was the partner of Cusack's father. At a hearing, Kopalas decides to back Cragie's story. Cusack testifies truthfully that he cannot comment on the incident in question because he arrived after the fact. However, it is revealed that Cusack once submitted a transfer order to have Cragie moved out of his unit. Other officers resent Cusack for breaking the unwritten "code of silence" which says officers should never report the errors or misconduct of their colleagues. Only former partner Detective Dorato remains loyal to Cusack.

Pirelli ends up dead and Diana missing. Cusack races toward the Comacho hangout and puts out a radio call for backup, but due to the hearing, other officers refuse to respond. He fights off Luis and other Comacho gang members by himself. Luis tells Cusack he wants Tony Luna, otherwise Diana dies, painfully and slowly.

Dorato tips off Cusack that Tony Luna was lying low in Wisconsin, returning to Chicago that night by train. Cusack waits outside the station, watching as Luna climbs into Scalese's limousine. Scalese chastises his nephew for igniting a gang war. The driver notices Cusack following and a wild chase ensues. The limo strikes a stalled car and overturns onto its roof, with Luna and Scalese killed in the explosion. Cusack, in need of a partner, returns to police headquarters and retrieves the Prowler robot, single-handedly launching a full-scale attack on the Comachos' lair in East Chicago, Indiana.

Other detectives berate Cusack for his actions. Kopalas, fed up, tells everyone off and confronts Cragie, stating that he will no longer lie for him. He reveals to the squad room that Cragie planted the gun on the teen he killed.

Cusack takes down the remaining Comacho members. Luis, wounded, enters a bathroom where Diana is bound. He raises a hammer, but Cusack shoots and kills him.

Backup arrives at last. Cusack places Diana in the care of the CFD ambulance crew. Commander Kates asks will he come in the next day, and Cusack, finally having regained the respect from his fellow officers, agrees. Dorato gives him a ride back to headquarters.

Cast

Production

Development

Screenwriters Michael Butler and Dennis Shryack originally wrote this on July 12, 1979 for Warner Bros. as Dirty Harry IV: Code of Silence.[3] When it wasn't made there, the script was briefly in the possession of Canadian producer Gene Slott, who was looking to make it on June 18, 1980.[4] but it was canceled due to making Sudden Impact on April 26, 1983. By May 10, 1983, Orion Pictures planned that Code of Silence will be Released by May 3, 1985.

On August 14, 1984 it was announced a film would be made starring Chuck Norris, set in Chicago.[5] The producers reportedly paid $800,000 for rights to the script.[6] It was set from October 1, 1984 to October 7, 1984.

Shooting

It was the first film for Molly Hagan, who had just finished drama school. She later recalled when shooting a scene after her character's family had been wiped out Norris thought his character should not hug or comfort her. Hagan said he should because "if you don’t, you’re an asshole." This caused tension and Davis said Hagan had to apologize because "Mr. Norris really identifies with his character... So I go out and apologize to Chuck Norris. He just looked at me like I was insane. I thought he was still really nice to me... I think part of the problem was that I was really young and who the fuck am I to tell anyone? I don’t think it's necessarily that he was a star. He's a very nice man, and he was terrific on the set. I think I had this attitude that was really not appropriate."[7]

Dennis Farina knew Davis' father Nate "so I felt very comfortable with Andy", he later said. "There was that Chicago connection where I knew he wasn't gonna lead me astray. He treated me so kindly, because he knew I was a novice, and kind of watched after me. And Chuck Norris was just a delight to work with, a hell of a nice guy. That film was a nice break for me."[8]

"When you talk about actors, Dustin Hoffman and Laurence Olivier are actors", said Norris. "They can do anything. Then you have your personalities, Burt Reynolds, Sylvester Stallone, Charles Bronson, Clint Eastwood, me. When they deviate too much from what audiences expect, they don't do very well, do they?"[9]

Reception

Critical

The film received mixed to positive reviews.[10][11][12][13] Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes retrospectively collected 19 reviews and judged 63% of them to be positive, with an average rating of 5.91/10.[14] It is considered by fans and critics as Chuck Norris's best film to date. Vincent Canby of The New York Times said "it could well prove to be his breakout picture".[15]

Roger Ebert, in his Chicago Sun-Times review of May 3, 1985, wrote: "This is a heavy-duty thriller, a slick, energetic movie with good performances and a lot of genuine human interest...a stylish urban action picture with sensational stunts." He gave the film three-and-a-half stars of a possible four.[16] Janet Maslin's review in The New York Times on the same day alluded to the film being "Norris's bid for a wider audience, and it succeeds to a considerable degree."[17] Gene Siskel in the Chicago Tribune also praised the film, writing: "Chuck Norris takes a big leap in his film career with Code of Silence...it's been a long time between cop pictures that have any kind of gritty feel. Clint Eastwood's last two Dirty Harry films were cartoonish by comparison."[18]

The film earned Norris his best reviews to date. "I really appreciate the acclaim", he said after the film's release. "I've worked hard these last nine years to get critics to look at me in a different light. They're usually more concerned with things like Passage to India, and they've hit me hard all these years, especially in the beginning. I'm really excited, to say the least."[19]

The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

Box office

The film was released by Orion Pictures in early May 1985. It debuted at number 1[21] with a weekend total of $5,512,461.[22]

According to Film Comment the film earned $8,9 million by the end of the year.[23]

The film went on to gross a total of $20,345,361, making it the second most successful Chuck Norris vehicle at the time behind Missing in Action (1984).

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See also

References

  1. "Action star Chuck Norris an intelligent Rambo". Toronto Star. 1986-02-11. Retrieved 2010-12-15.
  2. "Filmmakers on Film Andrew Davis". Telegraph. October 2003.
  3. "Dirty Harry IV : Code of silence". cocatalog.loc.gov. July 12, 1979. Retrieved June 7, 2014.
  4. "Slott has "Code Of Silence", a $7,000,000 thriller about a cop". Variety. varietyultimate.com. June 18, 1980. Retrieved June 7, 2014.
  5. "Sneed & Lavin INC.: On the road to Dallas...". Chicago Tribune. Aug 14, 1984. p. 12.
  6. Ron Base (Feb 11, 1986). "Action star Chuck Norris an intelligent Rambo". Toronto Star (FIN ed.). p. F4.
  7. "Molly Hagan looks back at Offending Chuck Norris". Paste Magazine. September 2016.
  8. "Interview with Dennis Farina". The Hollywood Interview. February 2008.
  9. Maslin, Janet (27 Apr 1985). "Norris no Olivier but he keeps busy". The Globe and Mail. p. E.3.
  10. "Chuck Norris Breaks The Stereotype In `Code Of Silence`". Chicago Tribune. 1985-05-03. Retrieved 2010-10-27.
  11. "Code of Silence". Variety. 1984-12-31. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
  12. "Code of Silence". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
  13. Maslin, Janet (1985-05-03). "SCREEN: CHUCK NORRIS IS A CHICAGO POLICE INSPECTOR IN 'CODE OF SILENCE'". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-12-15.
  14. "Code of Silence (1985)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved July 10, 2019.
  15. Canby, Vincent (May 12, 1985). "FILM VIEW – CHUCK NORRIS – THE PUBLIC HAS MADE HIM A STAR". The New York Times. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
  16. Ebert, Roger (May 3, 1985). "Code of Silence". RogerEbert.com. Ebert Digital LLC. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
  17. Maslin, Janet (May 3, 1985). "SCREEN: CHUCK NORRIS IS A CHICAGO POLICE INSPECTOR IN 'CODE OF SILENCE'". The New York Times. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
  18. Siskel, Gene (May 3, 1985). "Chuck Norris Breaks The Stereotype In 'Code Of Silence'". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
  19. KLEMESRUD, JUDY (1 Sep 1985). "CHUCK NORRIS -- STRONG, SILENT AND POPULAR". New York Times. p. A.14.
  20. "AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills Nominees" (PDF). Retrieved 2016-08-20.
  21. "CODE OF SILENCE' STILL NO. 1 AT MOVIE BOX OFFICE". Boston Globe. 1985-05-15. Retrieved 2011-01-02.
  22. "Code of Silence". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2014-06-07.
  23. Thompson, Anne. "Tenth Annual Grosses Gloss". Film Comment. 22 (2 (Mar 1986)). New York. pp. 64–67.
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