Edison

Edison (2005)

In this city, only the cops are above the law.

29/07/2005

#Drama#Action#Thriller

Overview

In the troubled city of Edison, a young journalist, his jaded editor, and an honest investigator from the district attorney's office join forces to gather evidence against corrupt members of an elite police unit.

Status: Released

Rating: 53%

Original language: EN

Budget: $25,000,000

Revenue: $4,165,675

Official website:
http://millennium-media.net/mf-films/edison

Details

Production Companies

Millennium Media

Millennium Media

Ascendant Pictures

Ascendant Pictures

VIP Medienfonds 3

VIP Medienfonds 3

Emmett/Furla Films

Emmett/Furla Films

Nu Image Entertainment

Nu Image Entertainment

Social Network

IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0389957

Wikipedia: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q1284839

Facebook: No data

Instagram: No data

X: No data

Cast

Reviews (1)

Review by: CinemaSerf

Written by: CinemaSerf on 2024-06-09T15:51:07.433Z

Well there's certainly nothing original here, but it's still not a badly executed crime drama that sees spunky young journalist "Pollack" (Justin Timberlake) fall out with his boss "Ashford" (Morgan Freeman) over some sloppy article he wrote about a man convicted that he doubts is guilty. Indeed, he is convinced that there are some crooked goings-on here and determines to investigate. This is a dangerous path to follow, though, as swiftly he and his girlfriend are on the end of a nasty beating and are only saved by the timely intervention of "Deed" (LL Cool J) whom by now we know is part of the specialist police FRAT squad, and they are the folks that seem to make the rules up as they go along. Soon "Ashford" starts to believe his young reporter and things get even more deadly for just about everyone. For some inexplicable reason, auteur David J. Burke lets the audience in on pretty much all of the secrets right from the get go, so there is precious little jeopardy as this set piece narrative unfolds. Timberlake looks good, Kevin Spacey features competently as the investigator of the investigators and Freeman sinks some Scotch meaningfully, perhaps to alleviate the predictability of the whole thing. It's well put together and to be fair, the writing isn't the worst - but it just comes across as a market research exercise to see how the public react to JT (keeping his clothes on). Instantly forgettable, sorry.

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