City by the Sea

    City by the Sea
    2002

    Synopsis

    Vincent LaMarca is a dedicated and well-respected New York City police detective who has gone to great lengths to distance himself from his past, but then makes the terrible discovery that his own son has fallen into a life of crime.

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    Cast

    • Robert De NiroVincent LaMarca
    • Frances McDormandMichelle
    • James FrancoJoey
    • Eliza DushkuGina
    • William ForsytheSpyder
    • Patti LuPoneMaggie
    • Anson MountDave Simon
    • John DomanHenderson
    • Brian TarantinaSnake
    • Drena De NiroVanessa Hansen

    Recommendations

    • 70

      New Times (L.A.)

      We so often hear the lament that Hollywood films don't have characters we can care about that it's a real pleasure to note that all the people in this one feel fully developed. It'd be nice if there were more of a plot to go along with them.
    • 63

      Baltimore Sun

      A great cast can't quite pull City by the Sea out of the drink.
    • 63

      Philadelphia Inquirer

      As a character study, City by the Sea is engaging. As a police thriller, it's not all there.
    • 63

      USA Today

      It's a run-of-the-mill cop thriller but also a gripping family drama. It is in the moments spent untangling the threads of troubled relationships that the movie is at its best.
    • 50

      Christian Science Monitor

      Frances McDormand and Patti LuPone are solid as his girlfriend and ex-wife, respectively, and James Franco is just right as his wayward son. They're a talented team. Too bad the movie doesn't live up to their abilities.
    • 50

      Slate

      That City by the Sea isn't laughed off the screen is testament to Caton-Jones' attention to actors and to some tightly written scenes.
    • 50

      The New York Times

      Stumbles from restrained, fine-edged realism into blunt and muddy melodrama.
    • 40

      The New Yorker

      After the complex buildup of tensions, the last ten minutes of the movie are a comic-pathetic letdown: the subdued acting and the trash-strewn street scenes lead to nothing more striking than the kind of overexplicit clichés heard in mediocre TV dramas. Even De Niro's discipline and skill can't save lines that should never have been spoken in the first place. [9 September 2002, p.162]

    Seen by

    • darkness
    • Sérgio P.