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Antoine Fuqua is a personal favorite director for yours truly (outside of the forgettable Infinite from pandemic lockdown days) and I’ve watched pretty much everything the man has ever directed over the years. He’s made some great movie, some good movies, and some genuinely FUN (if not flawed) movies over the years, but probably his magnum opus was 2001’s Training Day. It was the summer between my freshman and sophomore year of college and while Denzel had already been a household name, it wasn’t till this movie that he and Ethan Hawke literally blew up into overnight super stars. It’s smartly directed, full of nasty street stuff, and has a rousing hip hop and rock score that really pulls the audience along. Honestly, it’s one of the few movies I think of his that is as close to perfect as a movie, not just a genre like Antoine is known for.
Training Day is one day in the life of two cops. The first being Jake Hoyt (Ethan Hawke), a rookie who is riding along as partner for the day with Narcotics officer Alonzo Harris (Denzel Washington) as he tries to get out of being a lowly beat cop and move up the ranks at an accelerated pace. Harris isn’t your typical cop either. He’s a bit raw and rough, having lived on the streets for years as a Narcotics officer, and does his best to beat into Jake’s “by the books” skull that things are different on the streets. Sometimes you have to let the small fish go in order to catch the big fish. Sometimes you have to rough up a perp instead of throwing him in jail, and sometimes the streets actually get to you and you become one of them. As the day turns to night, Jake starts to suspect that his senior partner is more than just a lowly cop, and just may have gone a bit more native than he was expecting. An assertion that breeds a moral quandary as Jake is soon drawn into Harris’s schemes and double speak so quickly and so deeply that he may never get out in time.
The all star cast is not just relegated to our leads either. Scott Glenn, Macy Gray, and Eva Mendes turn in stunning performances, as does the entire cast in their own right. Training Day still stands some 22 years later as one of the best “dirty cop” movies of all times, and for good reason. Great writing, great scoring, great acting, and a superb director who was at the peak of his career back in the early 2000s (I still love The Replacement Killers as one of my favorites, even though it’s not his best).
Rating:
Rated R for strong brutal violence, pervasive language, drug content and brief nudity
4K Video: Video:
The one thing that will be controversial for some people is the regrading of the color palette. It’s not a completely new grading, but the heavy reliance on green and teal colors is a start change of pace from the warmer and redder Blu-ray and DVD from back in the day. Sadly I don’t really remember my summer time theatrical viewing of Training Day, and can only rely on my Blu-ray/DVD memory as a comparison, but I just can’t remember if this new master is more accurate to the source or if the old Blu-ray is. Either way, it’s not a horrible thing, as the teal and green tones were always present in the movie, they were just a bit more subdued and more warmth and redder tones were layered on top. This new HDR transfer looks amazing as is, but it IS visually different than what we’ve seen before.
Audio:
Extras:
• Additional scenes
• Alternate ending
• Theatrical trailer
• Training Day: Crossing the Line
• Two music videos: Nelly's "#1" and Pharoahe Monch's "Got You"
Final Score:
Training Day is an awesome movie, and it’s just as awesome to see it finally get an upgrade over the mediocre Blu-ray from back in the format’s infancy. The new 4K UHD comes from a great remaster, and luckily they included the remastered Blu-ray in with the 4K UHD instead of packing in the aging VC-1 encoded disc from over a decade ago. Only strange thing in this release is that the set didn’t come with a black 4K case, but a blue Blu-ray one (probably a cost cutting method, or last minute supply chain issue), and while it’s not a deal breaker by any means, it IS strange. Luckily the remastered video and Atmos upgrade is well worth grabbing the set for. Highly reccomended as a great buy
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Denzel Washington, Ethan Hawke, Scott Glenn, Macy Gray, Evan Mendes, Terry Crews, Dr. Dre., Snoop Dogg, Nick Chinlund
Directed by: Antoine Fuqua
Written by: David Ayer
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 AVC
Audio: English: Dolby Atmos (Dolby TrueHD 7.1 Core), French, German, Ittalian, Czech, Japanese DD 5.1, French, Spanish DD 2.0
Subtitles: English SDH, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Spanish, Cantonese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Korean, Norwegian, Romanian, Swedish
Studio: Warner Brothers
Rated: R
Runtime: 122 Minutes
Blu-ray Release Date: February 28th 2023
Recommendation: Great Buy