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Thursday 13 December 2012


End of Watch
Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Peña team up in this gritty, yet moving,
LA cop thriller
By Jenny McCartney

David Ayer’s End of Watch, set in the LA police
department, is a grittier, more satisfying affair. Ayer,
the writer of Training Day, has an instinct for the
edgy atmosphere and difficult choices involved in
police work in deprived, gang-ridden areas.

Here, he follows two cops, Officers Brian Taylor (Jake Gyllenhaal) and Mike Zavala (Michael
Peña), to some very dark places indeed. Taylor himself is documenting his work on a shaky
hand-held camera, as part of a study project, a conceit leading to a choppy mix of shooting
styles which is often an unnecessary distraction.

At the heart of the film is the relationship between Taylor and Zavala, an inseparable duo.
They are still young and rash enough to be idealistic and reckless about the job and the
opportunities it offers for testing their mettle (on one occasion, when they endanger their lives
to pull children from a blazing building, Zavala’s pregnant wife and Taylor’s girlfriend are not
congratulatory, but angry).

Their willingness to risk more than the average cop leads them to stumble upon a bigger evil
than they had imagined – connected to a Mexican drugs cartel, Hollywood’s new byword for
organised terror - with commensurate danger for themselves.

Solid heroism is a hard substance to digest, and Ayer successfully leavens it with the ordinary
funny, enchanting or irritating stuff of life: Zavala’s long-standing relationship with his wife
(Natalie Martinez); Taylor’s first discovery of a serious girlfriend (Anna Kendrick); and their
endless culturally-charged snappy banter (Zavala is of Mexican origin, Taylor white), which is
deprived of all sting by their evident well of affection. “I’m taking Janet to the Philharmonic,”
says Taylor. “Enjoy your white-people s---!” Zavala sings out.

Yet the normality and happiness they both strive for at home is contrasted with the grisly
dysfunction, and worse, that waits for them behind other front doors in the city: crack-
addicted mothers, sadistic boyfriends, drugs and mass-murders. If Taylor and Zavala have a
flaw it’s that they are not easily frightened enough.

Gyllenhaal and Peña evoke a convincing dynamic forged in boredom, fear and deep loyalty.
The characters love each other, and you like them, which is why Ayer’s violent, foul-mouthed
thriller succeeds in moving more than most.

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End of Watch

  • 1. Thursday 13 December 2012 End of Watch Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Peña team up in this gritty, yet moving, LA cop thriller By Jenny McCartney David Ayer’s End of Watch, set in the LA police department, is a grittier, more satisfying affair. Ayer, the writer of Training Day, has an instinct for the edgy atmosphere and difficult choices involved in police work in deprived, gang-ridden areas. Here, he follows two cops, Officers Brian Taylor (Jake Gyllenhaal) and Mike Zavala (Michael Peña), to some very dark places indeed. Taylor himself is documenting his work on a shaky hand-held camera, as part of a study project, a conceit leading to a choppy mix of shooting styles which is often an unnecessary distraction. At the heart of the film is the relationship between Taylor and Zavala, an inseparable duo. They are still young and rash enough to be idealistic and reckless about the job and the opportunities it offers for testing their mettle (on one occasion, when they endanger their lives to pull children from a blazing building, Zavala’s pregnant wife and Taylor’s girlfriend are not congratulatory, but angry). Their willingness to risk more than the average cop leads them to stumble upon a bigger evil than they had imagined – connected to a Mexican drugs cartel, Hollywood’s new byword for organised terror - with commensurate danger for themselves. Solid heroism is a hard substance to digest, and Ayer successfully leavens it with the ordinary funny, enchanting or irritating stuff of life: Zavala’s long-standing relationship with his wife (Natalie Martinez); Taylor’s first discovery of a serious girlfriend (Anna Kendrick); and their endless culturally-charged snappy banter (Zavala is of Mexican origin, Taylor white), which is deprived of all sting by their evident well of affection. “I’m taking Janet to the Philharmonic,” says Taylor. “Enjoy your white-people s---!” Zavala sings out. Yet the normality and happiness they both strive for at home is contrasted with the grisly dysfunction, and worse, that waits for them behind other front doors in the city: crack- addicted mothers, sadistic boyfriends, drugs and mass-murders. If Taylor and Zavala have a flaw it’s that they are not easily frightened enough. Gyllenhaal and Peña evoke a convincing dynamic forged in boredom, fear and deep loyalty. The characters love each other, and you like them, which is why Ayer’s violent, foul-mouthed thriller succeeds in moving more than most.