Synopsis
While investigating a young nun's rape, a corrupt New York City police detective, with a serious drug and gambling addiction, tries to change his ways and find forgiveness.
Votre Filmothèque
Cast
- Harvey KeitelLT
- Brian McElroyLT's Son (#1)
- Frankie AcciaritoLT's Son (#2)
- Peggy GormleyLT's Wife
- Stella KeitelLT's Daughter
- Dana DeeLT's Baby Girl
- Victor ArgoBet Cop
- Paul CalderonCop #1
- Leonard L. ThomasCop #2
- Anthony RuggieroLite
- 100
Chicago Sun-Times
It is not a "dirty movie," and in fact takes spirituality and morality more seriously than most films do. And in the bad lieutenant, Keitel has given us one of the great screen performances in recent years. - 91
Entertainment Weekly
For all its scenes of degradation (five minutes of which have been shorn for an R-rated cut; we recommend the original NC-17 version), Bad Lieutenant is a deeply moral movie. It's not pretty-it's not even very realistic-but it does matter. - 90
Variety
Abel Ferrara's uncompromising Bad Lieutenant is a harrowing journey observing a corrupt NY cop sink into the depths, with an extraordinary and uninhibited performance by Harvey Keitel in the title role. - 78
Austin Chronicle
What it lacks in charm, it compensates for with audacity and single-mindedness of vision. - 75
Chicago Tribune
For Keitel, this is the Scorsese film that Scorsese never gave him, in which he gets to elbow Robert De Niro away from center stage and take the best part for himself. He seizes the opportunity: Bad Lieutenant immediately becomes one of the defining roles of his career. [22 Jan 1993, Friday, p.C] - 70
Washington Post
Ferrara is clearly drawing an equation between the criminals' actions and The Lieutenant's, and as trite (and potentially shameless) as this may sound, it actually works. - 70
TV Guide Magazine
Harvey Keitel gives an astonishing performance here... Though hardly a film for all sensibilities, Bad Lieutenant has the courage of its own convictions, and follows them to the bitter end. - 50
ReelViews
As good as the lead actor is, he's not enough to save this picture from landing on the scrap-heap of uninspired, derivative, and grotesquely distasteful character studies. Ferrara is definitely no Martin Scorsese.