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End of Watch


Plot Synopsis[]

Brian Taylor and Miguel Zavala are close friends and partners in the Newton Division of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) in South Central Los Angeles. Taylor, a former Marine, is recording their police activities for a film project.

Upon responding to a public disturbance call, Tre, a Bloods gang member, yells racist insults at Zavala, who responds by accepting a fight. Zavala beats and arrests him, but wins Tre's respect for not charging him with assault. Later that night, Tre and his fellow Bloods gang members are attacked by a group of Sureños known as Curb Side gang in a drive-by shooting and one of Tre's friends is mortally wounded. The next day, the officers respond to a noise complaint at a house party full of Curb Side gang Sureños, where Taylor encounters gang members Santiago "Big Evil" Flores, "La-La", "Demon" and "Wicked". The next day Taylor and Zavala stop a gang member leaving Big Evil's house driving a truck and find ornately-decorated firearms and a large amount of money.

Taylor and Zavala are awarded the Medal of Valor after rescuing several children from a house fire. Upon further investigation a house, they arrest a man who is also in possession of several ornate firearms, and is guarding a cell full of human trafficking victims. When ICE agents arrive, one agent informs the officers that the house is tied to the Sinaloa Cartel, and strongly urges them to "lay low" due to possible reprisals. Around this time, Taylor begins dating a woman named Janet, and Zavala's wife Gabby gives birth to their first child.

One night, Taylor and Zavala respond to a call from their fellow officer, Sook, and find her partner Van Hauser with a knife through his eye. He leads them to Sook, who is being savagely beaten nearby. After arresting the culprit, the officers learn that Van Hauser is not returning to patrol and Sook is leaving the force. Taylor marries Janet, and at their wedding Zavala tells Taylor that, should anything happen to him, he will take care of Janet. The next day, the officers perform a welfare check on an elderly woman. In her house, they discover drugs, dismembered corpses, and a message from the cartel. Unbeknownst to them, a cartel member has "green-lit" the officers, and the gangsters from the earlier drive-by begin following them.

Shortly after Janet gets pregnant, the officers are baited into chasing a reckless driver into an apartment complex, where they are ambushed by Curb Side gang members. They fight their way into an alley, where Taylor is shot in the chest and severely wounded. As Zavala desperately attends to his injured partner, the assassins arrive and shoot him several times in the back, killing him. Police backup eventually arrives and the gangsters are gunned down and killed after refusing to surrender.

Taylor survives, having been shielded by Zavala's body. At Zavala's funeral, Taylor tries to deliver a eulogy, but only manages to say a few words: "He was my brother." In a flashback to the day of the shooting, Zavala recounts to Taylor a story from his youth before the two receive a call from dispatch.

Cast of Characters[]

  • Jake Gyllenhaal as Officer Brian Taylor
  • Michael Peña as Officer Miguel "Mike Z" Zavala
  • Natalie Martinez as Gabriela "Gabby" Zavala
  • Anna Kendrick as Janet Taylor
  • Frank Grillo as Sergeant "Sarge" Daniels
  • Jaime FitzSimons as Captain Reese
  • America Ferrera as Officer Orozco
  • Cody Horn as Officer Davis
  • David Harbour as Officer Van Hauser
  • Kristy Wu as Officer Sook
  • Maurice Compte as Santiago "Big Evil" Flores
  • Flakiss as "La-La" (Credited as Yahira 'Flakiss' Garcia)
  • Richard Cabral as "Demon"
  • Diamonique as "Wicked"
  • Manny Jimenez Jr. as Casper
  • David Fernandez as "Spooky"
  • David Castaneda as Mexican Cowboy (Credited as David Castaneda Jr.)
  • Ramon Camacho as Tall Cowboy
  • Corina Calderon as Jazmine
  • Cle Sloan as "Tre"
  • Leequwid 'Devil' Wilkens as "C.K."
  • James 'Pistol' McNeal as "D.J."
  • Zone as "Too Tall"
  • Alvin Norman as "Peanut"
  • Shondrella Avery as Bonita
  • Everton Lawrence as Bonita's Friend
  • Michael Monks as Homocide Detective #1
  • Hugh Daly as Homocide Detective #2

Trivia[]

  • David Ayer, who wrote and directed the film, grew up in South Central Los Angeles and has had numerous friends in the LAPD. He had written several films previously about police officers in Los Angeles, but while these depicted rogue and corrupt officers, he wanted to feature honest, ethical police work. In contrast to his previous works, Ayer wanted to focus on the friendship between Taylor and Zavala and "have all the cop stuff drop away and become secondary to the chemistry of these guys". Ayer wrote the screenplay over six days in December 2010. Jaime FitzSimons, a longtime friend of Ayer and a former police officer with the LAPD, served as the film's technical advisor, and his experiences from working in Los Angeles inspired several plot points of the film.
  • Jake Gyllenhaal was the first to be cast in the film; after receiving the script, he read it in an hour and immediately contacted Ayer. Michael Peña was cast shortly after, following a string of auditions. He and Gyllenhaal did not bond immediately but gradually became close friends over the process of training and filming. Gyllenhaal and Peña undertook five months of intensive training under the guidance of FitzSimons to prepare for their roles—this included 12-hour ride-alongs with multiple Greater Los Angeles Area law enforcement agencies up to three times a week, as well as training in hand-to-hand combat, police tactics and weapons. On his first ride-along, Gyllenhaal witnessed a murder during a drug bust. Tactical training was also given to the other actors playing police officers, including David Harbour, America Ferrera, Cody Horn, and Frank Grillo.
  • End of Watch was filmed on location in South Central Los Angeles, primarily in the area of the LAPD's Newton Division, one of the most violent and gang-affiliated areas of the city; Filming took place over 22 days in August 2011, with a budget of $7.5 million. The film was shot in a combination of found footage style and traditional photography.Most scenes were captured by four cameras simultaneously; these included a handheld camera operated by Gyllenhaal, cameras clipped to Gyllenhaal and Peña's vests, and dashboard footage from their patrol car. Some scenes were shot entirely by Gyllenhaal. An alternate ending of the film was shot where both of the main characters died, but Ayer ultimately chose to retain the original ending.
  • The world premiere of the film was held on September 8, 2012 at the Toronto International Film Festival. It was originally scheduled to be released theatrically on September 28, 2012, but the release was later moved to September 21.
  • Over its opening weekend in the United States, the film grossed $13.1 million and was the highest-grossing film at the box office for the weekend. It was especially popular among Hispanics, who made up 32% of the audience on the opening weekend, and a writer for The Hollywood Reporter attributed the film's popularity to strong word of mouth. The film was initially released in 2,730 theaters and expanded to 2,780 locations in its second week of release. On December 7, the film was given a nationwide re-release in 1,259 theaters shortly after it received two Independent Spirit Award nominations. On the first weekend of its re-release, it grossed $752,000.
  • After a total of 119 days, the film ended its American theatrical run in January 2013 with a gross of $41 million. It grossed $12 million from other territories, making a worldwide total gross of $53 million.
  • The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray on January 22, 2013. This release included 40 minutes of deleted scenes and an audio commentary of the film recorded by Ayer. In the United States, the film has grossed $15.6 million from DVD sales and $9.2 million from Blu-ray sales, making a total of $24.8 million.

Critical Reception[]

  • End of Watch received positive reviews from critics, who praised Ayer's direction and the performances of Gyllenhaal and Peña. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported an 85% approval rating with an average rating of 7.1/10, based on 166 reviews. The website's consensus states: "End of Watch has the energy, devotion to characters, and charismatic performances to overcome the familiar pitfalls of its genre and handheld format." At Metacritic, the film received a score of 68 out of 100, based on 37 critics, which indicates "generally favorable reviews".
  • Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 4 out of 4 stars, calling it "one of the best police movies in recent years, a virtuoso fusion of performances and often startling action", and went on to name the film the fourth best of 2012. Film critic James Berardinelli described End of Watch as "satisfying and emotionally potent ... a good, gritty drama of the sort that seems increasingly rare within the thriller genre", giving the film 3.5 out of 4 stars. Olly Richards, writing for Empire, gave the film 4 out of 5 stars and summarized it as "a collection of cop-movie clichés but presented with sufficient flair and strong performances that the ride is enough, even if its on rails". While New York '​s Bilge Ebiri found the film largely unrealistic and Ayer's direction "serviceable at best", he wrote that "Ayer and his cast appear to have so convincingly nailed the way these characters talk and act that you might not even notice the film slipping from workaday grit into out-and-out myth."
  • Critics praised End of Watch for its avoidance of clichés often used in police films, particularly the buddy cop genre. Peter Debruge of Variety wrote that "Like a knife in the eye, End of Watch cuts past the cliches of standard police procedurals" and praised Ayer for depicting the LAPD as "an honorable and efficient organization of people working together". Entertainment Weekly '​s Lisa Schwarzbaum, who gave the film an A-, described it as "one of the best American cop movies I've seen in a long time [and] also one of the few I've seen that pay serious attention to what cop life feels like, both on and off duty". In a review for The Globe and Mail, however, Rick Groen opined that the focus on "saintly" police officers was less interesting than Ayer's "trademark grit and authenticity".

The performances of Peña and Gyllenhaal were also praised by critics. Peter Debruge commended the realism that the two actors brought to their roles, saying, "Gyllenhaal and Peña so completely reinvent themselves in-character. Instead of wearing the roles like costumes or uniforms, they let the job seep into their skin." The Los Angeles Times '​s Betsy Sharkey applauded the chemistry between the two lead actors, as well as their individual performances, writing, "As good as Gyllenhaal is in this, Peña nearly steals the show." In a review for USA Today, Claudia Puig commended Gyllenhaal for "giv[ing] his best performance since Brokeback Mountain" and Peña for "shin[ing] with charisma". Roger Ebert highlighted End of Watch as "one of the performances of [Peña's] career" and praised the performances given by the supporting cast, including Natalie Martinez and Anna Kendrick.

  • An aspect of the film criticized in numerous reviews was its handheld camerawork and cinematography. Richard Corliss wrote for Time that the found footage style of cinematography "borders on the ludicrous" and that "the tactic fatally substitutes photo realism for fauxto realism". Similarly, The Washington Post '​s Michael O'Sullivan found the aesthetic gimmicky, overused, and "an unnecessary distraction from the story". On the other hand, Amy Biancolli of the San Francisco Chronicle felt that although the cinematography was inconsistent, "it's used to deepen its main characters" and "lends the film a lively intimacy".
  • Other reviewers criticized the casting of minorities as gang members. Manohla Dargis of The New York Times pointed out that "almost all of [the crimes are] committed by the black and mainly brown people", while The Globe and Mail '​s Rick Groen criticized "the script's penchant for overdemonizing the ghetto's black residents".

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