Speaking of sociopaths,
"Training Day"
is a film I absolutely hate, despise, and abominate. Writer David Ayer and director Antoine Fuqua certainly know the cop lingo, but are incapable of producing anything other than cookie cutter villains with badges. Every single cop on screen in "Training Day" is murderously corrupt or vacuously weak-willed. The arguable exceptions – a cop tandem helping a stranded motorist – are used as a point of derision ("Do you want to be on my team," a disgusted Denzel asks. "Or theirs?"). As every uniformed being in "Training Day" conducts himself like some Rampart stereotype – another ill-deserved reputation – I can't imagine another film that has done more to hurt law enforcement's reputation than this one.
OK, I get it. Cops aren't saints, and you need drama. I'm not above portraying cops as occasionally corrupt; just don't make him the hero. That doesn't mean that he can't steal the film. He is ethically-challenged after all, right?
Here is where
"Touch of Evil"
fills the bill on both fronts. Orson Wells' bloated cop oozes corruption from every sweaty pore. Offering a counter-weight to the proceedings is south of the border cop Ramon Vargas, portrayed by gabacho Charlton Heston, which is one of the most curious casting jobs since John Wayne jumped into Ghengis Khan's wardrobe.
"The Untouchables"
– With Ennio Morricone's driving score heralding each dramatic raid, Kevin Costner, Sean Connery, Andy Garcia and Charles Martin Smith (!) kick ass and take names in this Brian De Palma-helmed epic. Yeah, Costner had that moral lapse on the rooftop at the end, but can you really blame him?
"The Silence of the Lambs"
– Here's a good piece of trivia for you. Since Oscar's first presentation, only three movies have won all the top awards – Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Screenplay and Best Director – in a single year: "It Happened One Night," "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," and "Silence of the Lambs." As such, I'd be remiss if I didn't include the adaptation of Thomas Harris' novel. Besides featuring the best low-key female bad ass this side of "Aliens" Ripley, it showcases a villain that I suspect more than a few viewers begrudgingly respect and definitely fear: Hannibal Lector.