The Enforcer [1976] (REGION 1) (NTSC)


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Editorial
Amazon.co.uk Review

Trapped by his image in 1976, Clint Eastwood resurrected his Dirty Harry character for a third go-round (out of a total of five) in The Enforcer, a potboiler of a story in which the San Francisco detective takes on a group of revolutionary kids. Tyne Daly costars as a female cop who partners with the reluctant Harry Callahan, and she does very well by a role created merely to underscore and articulate the hero's various virtues. It's a dull package all around, but inside the wrapping are good performances by the two leads. --Tom Keogh



SLIGHTLY BETTER THAN "MAGNUM FORCE"
Review date: 2008-07-13 Rating: 8 out of 10

Again a very good entry in the "Dirty Harry" series, although not as great as the original or "Sudden Impact". Descent actions scenes. Eastwood in top form.


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Reviews


Has its moments, not that special
Review date: 2008-06-04 Rating: 6 out of 10

This is worth seeing if you're a big Clint Eastwood fan, otherwise it's a so-so thriller. A good ending and far better than your average cop movie in that regard, but lacks the punch that gave the first movie such impact.

The Force will always be with you
Review date: 2005-01-08 Rating: 8 out of 10

"Dirty" Harry Callaghan - bane of City Hall's pen-pushers is at it again. "The Enforcer" is an expression used of Harry's side-arm and he is called upon to empty its chamber - after Harry's famous confrontational along the lines of
"I know what you're thinking: did he fire six shots or was it only five? To tell the truth, in all this excitement, I just can't remember, but considering that this is the most powerful handgun in the world and will blow your head clean off - you've got to ask yourself a question "Am I feeling lucky?" Well are you, Punk?"
you spend the films counting shots and re-loads, just so when those moments come, you know what chance there is of exploding heads.

Dirty Harry is still getting the - end of the stick.

Dirty Harry and a female partner face hippie revolutionaries
Review date: 2004-10-17 Rating: 8 out of 10

In the original "Dirty Harry," Inspector Harry Callahan (Clint Eastwood) went after a serial killer and in the "Magnum Force" sequel he went after vigilante cops. To balance the latter, with its liberal nightmare, the third film in the series, "The Enforcer," offers up a conservative counterpart by having the villains be long-haired hippie freaks in something called the Ecumenical Liberation Army (i.e., think about Tanya, a.k.a. Patty Hearst, and the SLA). The obvious point is that when it comes to be judge, jury, and executioner, Dirty Harry does not make distinctions, ideological or otherwise.

On the one hand the villains in "The Enforcer" are the weakest of any of the films in the series, but then the ELA is only Dirty Harry's target and not his opponent. That would be Kate Moore (Tyne Daly). The film begins with another example of how Dirty Harry has this bad habit of going after criminals on the streets of San Francisco in his own special way (hey, criminals ask for a car, Harry gives them a car), which always gets him punished by being transferred from Homicide to something less fun like the Personnel department, which is where he ends up this time, working on the promotion board. When he first Moore she is up for a promotion and although he puts her through the wringer, making clear his disdain for the idea that a woman can be a good cop, the politics of the time not only ensure that she gets promoted to fullfill some quota, but the ironic frame of the film means she ends up being Harry's partner when he is put back on the street so that he has a chance to go around and shoot more people, who, this time around at least, tend to start shooting first so that it is more self defense than natural orneriness when Harry starts firing back with greater accuracy and bigger bullets.

Moore surprises Harry because she is not stupid, either in what she says or does, and manages to learn from him despite his attitude and unwillingness to explicitly teacher her anything about the job. Of course, in due time she actually saves Harry's life and he is forced to mumble something about how he could have a worse partner than Moore. Of course, in retrospect we are not surprised that Tyne Daly, who went on to win four Emmys (including three in a row) for her consummate performance as Mary Beth Lacey on "Cagney & Lacey), can hold her own with Clint Eastwood. Given how laughable the hippie revolutionaries are this film could have ended up being a big joke without her performance and the chemistry she has with the star, which is made all the more impressive by the fact that there is absolute nothing sexual about their relationship.

The best parts of this movie are Harry and Moore establishing their relationship and becoming a team. These are the scenes that have not only the most humor, as Harry's chauvinism runs into Moore's competence, but also that actually bet beyond the facade of the character of Dirty Harry. This is what makes many of the action sequences, in contrast, to seem so cartoonish, especially in the film's end game when the mayor is kidnapped and Harry gets to use a bazooka during the final shootout on Alcatraz Island. It might seem strange that the interpersonal relationship is the best part of a Dirty Harry movie, but that is the part of "The Enforcer" that gets five stars, while the violence that was supposed to be the big attraction gets only a three (and the film almost loses another star because of the costumes and music, even more so now that they are both so outdated).

Harry and Lacey?
Review date: 2004-09-13 Rating: 10 out of 10

Classic Clint really...second only to the original Dirty Harry. A great psychotic villain, and a great partner in the form of Tyne Daly of Cagney and Lacey fame. Harry retains his old style - great 44 magnum moments - and there is also his attitude to sexual equality...someone's put a bit of thought into this one...but not enough to detract from Harry...I prefer this to the other sequels...'marvellous...'


Product Details/Specifications


Actor(s):
Robert Behling
Bradford Dillman
Joe Bellan
Tyne Daly
Bill Ackridge

Creators:
Bill Ackridge (Primary Contributor)
Robert Behling (Primary Contributor)
Richard C. Glouner (Cinematographer)
Charles W. Short (Cinematographer)

Recording label: Warner Home Video
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video
EAN: 0012569818385
Binding: DVD
Number of items: 1
Format: Colour, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC,
Release date: 2008-06-03
Universal product code (UPC): 012569818385
Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
Region code: 1
Running time: 97 minutes
Theatrical release date: 1976
Language: English (Original Language)

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