This week marks the 25th anniversary of “The Dead Pool,” which, perhaps no one realized at the time, was the final “Dirty Harry” movie. The movie was released on July 13, 1988, shortly after Eastwood turned 58, and while the actor has continued to play cops and gunslingers and action heroes, he tossed away Inspector Harry Callahan’s badge for good.
“Dead Pool” isn’t a great movie (though it did give early career boosts to Patricia Clarkson, Liam Neeson, and Jim Carrey), but it matters because it marked the end of an era — and perhaps the beginning of another. It marked a farewell to the most influential cop drama series in modern film history, and it paved the way for our current wave of similar shoot-’em-up heroes, loose-cannon cops who are even more dangerous and misanthropic than the criminals they collar.
With 1971’s original “Dirty Harry,” Eastwood helped bury the Western genre that had made him famous and replace it with the police drama. Instead of the sheriff or the marshal, it was the modern-day lawman who became the dispenser of rough frontier justice. The contemporary urban crime drama became the moral arena where questions of right vs. wrong, justice vs. injustice, and civilization vs. anarchy played out.
Dirty Harry was controversial at first, a wish-fulfillment answer to the Nixonian silent majority who felt that crime had gotten out of hand, thanks to liberals who supposedly placed too much value on the suspect’s legal rights and too little on the victim’s. He seemed to be a creature of right-wing id, responding to the excesses of the ’60s (as embodied by villain Scorpio) in a violent, inappropriate, but thoroughly cathartic way.
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Critic Pauline Kael called the movie “fascist,” though “Nietzschean” would have been a better adjective. Sure, Harry’s exercising power on behalf of the state, but he’s also a lone vigilante with an idiosyncratic moral code based not on law or strength, just his own gut instinct. That becomes clear in the sequels, like “Magnum Force,” where he wipes out a squad of police vigilantes who go even further than he does in their willingness to hunt down and kill those criminals who might otherwise remain free on technicalities. Later still, in “Sudden Impact,” he looks the other way at Sondra Locke’s vigilantism as she stalks and blows away the thugs who gang-raped her and her sister. Why is vigilantism okay for some, not for others? Harry doesn’t articulate a reason, except perhaps in his “Magnum Force” catchphrase: “A man’s got to know his limitations.”
Harry is neither a doctrinaire conservative nor a liberal; he simply doesn’t get along with anyone, not with suspects, not with his bosses, and not with his partners. About the only way to gain Harry’s respect is to be grievously wounded in the line of duty, something that happens far too often to his partners. One such partner was played by Tyne Daly in “The Enforcer,” nearly a decade before she played pioneering policewoman Mary Beth Lacey on TV’s “Cagney & Lacey.” Harry’s grudging respect for her, along with his recognition of a kindred spirit in Locke and his courtship of pushy reporter Clarkson in “The Dead Pool,” could be counted as a crude kind of feminism.
If Harry has no politics other than a blunt kind of chivalry, what drives him to court danger and violence? Maybe it’s fun to him. The chase sequence in “The Dead Pool” involving a remote-controlled toy car is pretty absurd, a mockery of pretty much every cop movie car chase since “Bullitt” 20 years earlier, but Eastwood has called it one of the scenes he’s most enjoyed shooting. In the diner scene in “Sudden Impact,” when Harry famously tells a perp, “Go ahead, make my day,” audiences tend to read the line as world-weary sarcasm from a guy for whom blowing away bad guys is just another day at the office. But what if he means it, like shooting this thug is something Harry might actually relish?
In this way, “Dirty Harry” tutored viewers to appreciate action for its own sake. In such movies, Eastwood seemed to suggest, you shouldn’t think too much about all the gunplay, you should just learn to enjoy it. (It’s not clear whether Eastwood actually holds such a view; four years after “The Dead Pool,” his Western “Unforgiven” earned a slew of Oscars, including Best Picture, for presenting its audience with cathartic violence even while chastising them for enjoying it or ignoring the moral component of said violence.)
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Just how influential was Eastwood’s run as Dirty Harry? Well, ask yourself this: When was the last time you saw a movie about a cop who was happy and well-adjusted, got along well with his or her superiors and his or her partner, didn’t bend the rules, and caught the villain by operating strictly by the book? Okay, there was Frances McDormand’s Marge Gunderson in “Fargo” back in 1996, but other than that over the last 42 years? Not a one.
In recent years, every movie cop protagonist seems to be a Callahan-style loose cannon. There’s Mel Gibson’s Martin Riggs in the “Lethal Weapon” franchise (launched a year before “Dead Pool” closed the “Dirty Harry” series). There’s Eddie Murphy’s Axel Foley in the “Beverly Hills Cop” movies. There’s Nick Nolte’s grouchy maverick in “48 Hrs.” There’s Sylvester Stallone in “Cobra” (and, more extreme, in “Judge Dredd”). There’s Chris Tucker in the “Rush Hour” films, Martin Lawrence and Will Smith in the “Bad Boys” movies, and now we even have Melissa McCarthy in “The Heat.”
Then there’s Bruce Willis’s John McClane in “Die Hard,” which opened the same weekend as “The Dead Pool,” as if picking up the torch Dirty Harry laid down. In five movies over the past quarter century, Willis’s McClane has proved to be at once more realistic and more cartoonish than Harry. On the one hand, he has a backstory to explain his psychological baggage (his dedication to the job has, over time, ruined his marriage and family life and driven him to the bottle). On the other, he has both a superhuman resourcefulness and a superhuman ability to take a beating. In a way, his enemies have made him bigger than Harry; rather than diabolical serial killers or rogue cops, whose cleverness amounts to little more than gaming the system, McClane’s adversaries are masterminds of crime and mayhem who evoke modern fears of terrorism and elevate McClane’s heroics to a global scale.
Audiences demand bigger stakes now, and bigger action payoffs. But they still look to the cop with that big .44 Magnum as a model for how to achieve that blowing-away-the-bad-guy catharsis.
Gallery | Cop Movie Mistakes
‘Beverly Hills Cop’ (1984)
After the truck chase, Axel (Eddie Murphy) arrives at the police station. He walks through a glass door that reads ‘Investigaton Operations Division,’ which is missing the last “i” in “investigation.” Whoever made those letters definitely needs spell check.
‘American Gangster’ (2007)
In one scene from Ridley Scott’s 1970s detective drama, Frank Lucas (Denzel Washington) is speaking on a public telephone. However, visible in the background is a poster with a website address on it, ending in .biz. First of all, the internet wasn’t officially launched until the late 80s. Second of all, who has a .biz web address?
‘Bad Boys’ (1995)
When a database is being hacked in Michael Bay’s “Bad Boys” and the password for it is shown on the monitor, we soon realize that they’re actually hacking an Autodesk printer driver. We may have fallen for that in 1995, but sorry Mr. Bay, you can’t pull that one anymore.
‘Bad Boys II’ (2003)
In the sequel to Will Smith and Martin Lawrence’s cop comedy, we get more action and more camera equipment. At the end of the MacArthur Causeway chase, there is a shot of a police car spinning on its underside. Here, a camera is seen sliding on the road, moving off-screen.
‘Bullitt’ (1968)
In Steve McQueen’s classic San Francisco-based film, parked cars seem to move around a lot. In the lead-up to a chase, the Charger stops at the top of a hill where a green car is parked in front of a red car. But as the Charger pulls away in the next shot, we see the same red car with a blue one now in front of it.
‘Die Hard 2’ (1990)
When Richard Thornburg (William Atherton) is in the airplane bathroom giving his live report, he is holding the phone upside down in several shots. (Side note: did they even have cordless phones in planes in 1990?) You’d think he’d notice.
‘Die Hard’ (1988)
John McClane (Bruce Willis) gets pretty dirty and bloody in “Die Hard,” so we can’t blame him for a little mess on his clothes. But when he climbs out of the air duct, his shirt changes from its previous white to dark green. While the air duct may have dirtied his tank top, there’s no way it changed to a deep greenish-brown just from that.
‘Heat’ (1995)
When Neil (Robert De Niro) breaks into Van Zandt’s (William Fichtner) apartment and shoots him, Van Zandt flies backward from the blow. If you look closely though you can see a stunt wire running up the bottom of his sweat pants that pulled him back.
‘Lethal Weapon 2’ (1989)
When the hotel waiter is firing his gun at Riggs (Mel Gibson) through the truck’s rear window, his shooting hand switches from left to right between shots.
‘Narc’ (2002)
When Tellis (Jason Patric) enters names into the computer in “Narc,” one of the fields that is supposed to be for “KNOWN ALIASES”. reads “KNOWN ALAISES”. There’s no excuse for this; “Narc” was made in 2002, spell check clearly existed.
‘Public Enemies’ (2009)
In one scene from Michael Mann’s 1930’s gangster film you can very obviously spot a modern Jeep Grand Cherokee parked on the other side of the street behind the 1930s car. Sometimes these mistakes happen, but, wow, someone surely wasn’t paying attention!
‘Red Dragon’ (2002)
In the scene when Will (Edward Norton) is opening the drawer of VHS films from the Leeds home, there is a copy of “Mrs. Doubtfire” in the left column of tapes. Brett Ratner’s “Red Dragon” takes place several years before the events of 1991’s “Silence of the Lambs,” but the Robin Williams comedy came out in 1993. Hmm…
‘Rush Hour’ (1998)
When the young girl Soo Yung is kidnapped, her tie is on. But in the next shot, it has mysteriously disappeared.
‘Seven’ (1995)
When Somerset (Morgan Freeman) goes back to one victim’s house alone, he cuts a sticker on the door with his switchblade to get in. The first error is that the “Keep Out” sticker is on the inside of the door. The second is that the door opens inward, thus making a “Keep Out” sticker pointless. How did the cops leave his house if the sticker was put on the inside? Oops.
‘The Silence of the Lambs’ (1991)
When the police discover Hannibal Lecter (Anthony Hopkins) is hiding on top of the elevator car, they look down the shaft to find him with plenty of blood on his back — enough that it reaches down to his belt. However, when they open the elevator ceiling door and the body falls down there is only a small amount of blood.
‘The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3’ (2009)
In the 2009 remake of “The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3,” the money car gets hit by an ambulance on its way to the drop and rolls over. The light bar on top breaks off, but it reappears when the car falls off the bridge.
‘The Bone Collector’ (1999)
When Amelia (Angelina Jolie) jumps into the water to save the the little girl there is tape on her mouth. In the next shot the tape is gone.
‘The Usual Suspects’ (1995)
Right before the crooks rob the police car, a Boeing 747 (which has four engines) is seen landing. But when the plane is shown from behind, it has only two engines and fewer main landing gears.