From the daily archives:

Friday, April 6, 2007

Bon Cop Bad Cop

by James McNally on April 6, 2007 · 1 comment

in DVD

Bon Cop Bad Cop

Bon Cop Bad Cop (Director: Erik Canuel, Canada, 2006): Here’s a film that could only be made in Canada. Colm Feore and Patrick Huard play cops from Ontario and Quebec respect­ively who are forced to team up when a body is found draped across the border sign between the two provinces. The murder is just the first of a grisly series involving hockey and tat­toos, and the pair must battle not only the killer but their lan­guage and cul­tural prejudices.

The hockey angle involves the league commissioner’s plan to move the Toronto fran­chise to Texas, and the murders are fuelled by a very Canadian sense of out­rage at our national sport being sold off to bored and rich Americans looking for nov­elty. There are sen­dups of hockey commentator/buffoon Don Cherry (played by a hil­arious Rick Mercer) and NHL com­mis­sioner Gary Bettman (renamed “Buttman” for the film and played by an actor of, shall we say, extremely small stature).

Canuel has made a pretty good buddy cop movie that also man­ages to have fun with ste­reo­types of both English and French Canadians, and this film actu­ally made a decent amount of money up here, although to be fair, most of it was in Quebec, where film­goers will actu­ally pay to see homegrown pro­duc­tions like this one.

Unfortunately, the movie’s greatest strength is also its greatest han­dicap. The hil­arious cul­tural ref­er­ences would make it com­pletely unin­tel­li­gible to anyone out­side of Canada. The DVD includes three ver­sions: an English ver­sion with sub­titles for the French dia­logue, a French ver­sion with sub­titles for the English dia­logue, and a com­pletely unsub­titled ver­sion for those true Canadians, most of whom are living in Ottawa or Montreal.

7/10(7/10)

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