Copshop- Movie Review

Copshop- Movie Review

Directed by: Joe Carnahan

Starring: Gerard Butler, Frank Grillo, Alexis Louder, Toby Huss

Movie with a slow and boring beginning and a horrible, totally uninventive end. 

Don’t watch it. You don’t need it. 

It’s a cheap production, you will even see that 5 different small production companies are behind the production of this film. Wasted money. 

All action is located in a remote police station somewhere in the deserts of Nevada. It could have been filmed in any suburban house’s basement. 

It’s a standoff drama with a bit of action. A mob fixer and contract killers are locked in police station cells. Another contract killer is coming from outside leaving a massacre of police staff in the station, all but one female police officer. She is in between two cells- the one of the fixer and another the contract killer. She is badly wounded and bleeding heavily. The only hope is to unlock one of the two evils. Dilemma: who is the rotten bastard who is gonna do less damage?

What else is horrible in this movie is casting. All actors and characters are a total miss match. The worst of all is the second contract killer. The name of the character is Anthony Lamb. If he didn’t have a gun you would think this must be a senior citizen from the local community club or clown from the nearest small city circus. 

When you see a movie like “Copshop,” you ask yourself: are all those executive producers throwing money for something like this, for real? Are they in their right minds when they make a decision to invest in a screenplay like this one? Don’t they have anywhere else to get rid of their money? Give it to charity, buy some property, gamble it away in a casino… better than to producing a visual catastrophe like “Copshop.” 

If this is, as somebody said: “one of the best action movies of the year”, than-forget this year. Don’t expect any good action in 2021. 

And one more thing: these amateurs should be given a lifetime ban in the movie production business. 

If you are not in the industry, you better don’t be there. Ever.