A Cop Movie (2021) Directed by Alonzo Ruizpalacios
A Cop Movie is a movie with a hybrid stlye all its own about a pair of cops in Mexico City, Theresa and Montoya. We meet them as characters played by actors in a sort of docudrama, but then the fourth wall is broken and now the actors who play the characters talk about their feelings about the whole process of their performance, and finally we meet the real-life couple who provide information from their perspective. Meanwhile, director Alonzo Ruizpalacios is messing around with not only a hodge-podge of perspectives but he is also throwing in offhandedly a parody of TV cop movies just for the hell of it, complete with a Lalo Schifrin-style soundtrack and cops sliding across the hoods of cars giving chase to bad guys. It's dizzying, rollicking, and a little confusing. The question becomes what do we get for all this razzle-dazzle and could we have gotten something better in a more conventional mode of delivery. I think we actually get quite a lot of bang for the buck.
Certainly, we get a very clear idea of what it is like to be a Mexico City cop. A great many Mexico City cops become cops because they are without options, ill-equipped to do much else, poorly educated, and easily malleable. It is not a system that attracts the best and brightest because there is little organization, scant public funding, zero prestige, and a great deal of public suspicion about cops in general, much of it, sadly, well founded. For instance, just because a cop calls for an ambulance doesn’t mean an ambulance is coming. Corruption is so socially engrained in the system that it doesn’t even seem particularly corrupt anymore, not when everybody at all levels accept bribery the way a waiter might expect tips. The Mexican police employ massive indiscretion when dealing with the public, with the power to harass at random any unfortunate motorist whenever a cop needs money for a donut and coffee. But there is also massive corruption throughout the police hierarchy itself which means young cops have to pay bribes to get decent cars, weapons, or body armour.
All this wears down our two featured cops, Teresa and Montoya are flawed people, but they are doing their best to do their job and stay afloat in a system that is ultimately brutally sexist and casually soul-destroying. We meet them individually; we meet them as a couple, as the “love patrol.” There is so much that grinds them down, so much that they don’t have adequate training for. The comments from the characters, the actors and the actual people themselves all paint an incredibly bleak picture of individuals trapped in a system that shows them no mercy.
I was left wondering how in the world could this system ever be fixed. Does this movie provide a picture of what North American policing will become or has already become? When a society exists for the few who become rich at the expense of the many, a hell is created on earth. The most fortunately affluent citizens might as well live on Mount Olympus while the easily expendable hoi polio fight it out below for meagre scraps. Alonzo Ruizpalacios is one director to really keep an eye on in the future. He is not all style and no substance by any means.
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