Highway Patrolman (1991)
69KHighway Patrolman (1991). 1h 44m | Not Rated
“Alex Cox is one of the most original, brave and uncompromising directors to emerge from Britain in the last twenty years. Unfortunately it seems he has to fight tooth and nail to get his movies made, and when he manages to get them released they are virtually ignored. Itu0026#39;s a shame that a second rate, audience pleasing hack like Guy Ritchie gets all the attention he does when he doesnu0026#39;t have a TENTH of the talent Cox has! u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eEver since Coxu0026#39;s second feature u0026#39;Sid And Nancyu0026#39; his career has been a mess. His follow ups, the controversial political drama u0026#39;Walkeru0026#39;, and the self indulgent spaghetti western homage u0026#39;Straight To Hellu0026#39;, almost killed stone dead any chance of mainstream Hollywood success. After a period in the wilderness he returned with his Mexican made u0026#39;Highway Patrolmanu0026#39;, and it is his most polished, conventional and artistically successful movie to date. Sadly it hasnu0026#39;t reached a larger audience, though one wonders if Steven Soderbergh is a fan, as sections of his u0026#39;Trafficu0026#39; (the good bits!) bear quite a striking resemblance to Coxu0026#39;s movie.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eEverything about u0026#39;Highway Patrolmanu0026#39; is superb – the script, the acting (especially Roberto Sosa in the title role of an idealistic young cop who must wrestle with his conscience), the editing and cinematography. The movie lacks Coxu0026#39;s trademark surreal subversiveness, so it is not all that representative of his output, but who cares when the results are as fine as this. An emotionally engaging, well crafted movie that any film maker should be proud to be responsible for. Try and see it!”