Q & A

Q & A

Movie |

New York City | Police Brutality

  • Duration: 2h 12min
  • Music: Rubén Blades,Maurice Schell,Mark Rathaus,Peter Odabashian
  • Award(s): Golden Globe 1991 (Nominated) Awards List
  • Similar To: The Bluff, Twisters
  • Story:
    A young district attorney seeking to prove a case against a corrupt police detective encounters a former lover and her new protector, a crime boss who refuse to help him.
    Full Story
6.6/10
IMDb

Q & A - Where to Stream?

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Videos: Trailers, Teasers, Featurettes

Q & A - Cast

Q & A - Crew

STORY AND RATINGS

Story
A young district attorney seeking to prove a case against a corrupt police detective encounters a former lover and her new protector, a crime boss who refuse to help him.
Ratings

6.6/10

IMDb

AWARDS

Nominations
Golden Globe Award

Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture | 1991 | Armand

TRIVIA AND POPULAR DIALOGUES

Trivia

Nick Nolte gained 50 pounds for his role as Brennan.

In the gay club dressing room where Bobby Texador, his wife and bodyguards are meeting Roger Montalvo, "I Love Paul C." is written and circled on the message board directly behind Montalvo, played by Paul Calderon.

Jenny Lumet (Nancy Bosch) is the daughter of the director Sidney Lumet.

Patrick O'Neal (Kevin Quinn) and Cynthia O'Neal (Agnes Quinn) were married in real life.

Popular Dialogues

"Leo Bloomenfeld: [telling Al Reilly about Kevin Quinn] He's a prick. He's a racist and an anti-Semite and a prick. He wants to be Tom Dewey, and he will be. He married for politics and all he can see is way clear to God knows how high up. Years ago, when we still had executions in the state, he used to volunteer as a witness. Yeah, his first murder case, uhh he was a young A.D.A. then and I'm talking years ago... The case was shaky, circumstantial and he wanted a recommended death penalty from the jury. Before he was finished, he had them believing that poor black kid raped their mothers. He goes up to Sing-Sing for the electrocution. And the next day, we're sitting around, drinking coffee and he walks in with this grin on his face and someone says "Hey, how did it go?", he says, casually, "He fried!" and then he says, "I sure hope he was guilty!" and he laughs! Fuck him! Now and forever!"

"Captain Lt. Michael 'Mike' Brennan, NYPD: Oh, Reilly. You just loved the idea of your father. Now, your father was dirty. He was as dirty as they come. Nothing big, just penny-ante stuff. You know, free meals. A place to coop. For a while, he was a bag man for a pad in the South Bronx. The normal stuff. He took home $100, $150 a week. That's all. But hell, what a cop. Like me, he was the first through the door, the window, the skylight! I mean, he knew there were animals out there! He knew there was a line the niggers, the spics, the junkies, the faggots had to cross to get into people's throats. He was that line. I am that line. And the fucking judges and Jew lawyers, aldermen and guinea DAs are raking it in. We take a fucking hamburger and it's goodbye badge, gun and pension. And all the time, it's our lives that's on the line. It's our widows and our orphans! Now you're a rogue cop, you mick bastard! You went from our side to their side."

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