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Equal Standard
Crime film by Brendan Kyle Cochrane From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Equal Standard is a 2020 American crime drama film written by Taheim Bryan and directed by Brendan Kyle Cochrane. The film stars Ice-T, Maurice Benard, Tobias Truvillion, Syleena Johnson, Robert Clohessy, Chris Kerson and Jules Willcox. The film follows New York City Detective Chris Jones (Tobias Truvillion), who gets shot by a white detective, returns fire and kills him.
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The film was released in selected theatres on May 7, 2021, by Mutiny Pictures.[2] Film writer Taheim Bryan was shot to death in New York City in August 2021 while sitting in his Mercedes-Benz.[3]
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Cast
- Tobias Truvillion as Detective Chris Jones
- Syleena Johnson as Sergeant Jackie Jones
- Ice-T as Croft
- Maurice Benard as Captain Chavat Issak
- Robert Clohessy as Internal Affairs Detective Rullan
- Chris Kerson as Detective Kevin McKenzie
- Jules Willcox as Kathy McKenzie
- Fredro Starr as Du
- Hassan Johnson as Justice
- Marc John Jefferies as Kenny Williamson
- Jermaine Hopkins as Jermaine
- Anthony 'Treach' Criss as Trigger
- Myles Clohessy as Officer Mitchell
- James Doherty as Officer Jacobs
- Gabriella Sophia Terrero as Kimberly Rullan
- Jermel Howard as Mel
- Kresh Novakovic as Officer Parmeto
- Sal Rendino as Jim Hannigan
- Hilary Barraford as Katie Mitchell
- Josh Berresford as Detective Jack Mullen
- Bill Weeden as Mr. Gorka
- Darlene Dues as Michael's Mother
- Brad Fleischer as Josh McKenzie
- Gerard Cordero as Detective Jean Rivera
- Vincent Minutella as Internal Affairs Detective Jerry Rifkin
- Hwalan Shub as Detective Kate Summers
- Ameerah Briggs as Ashley Williamson
- Reggie Talley as Michael Williamson
- Audrey Labarthe as Detective Susan Rosette
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Reception
Film critic Tomris Laffly from Variety gave it a mixed review writing: "Trying to be The Wire of the BLM era, Brendan Kyle Cochrane's haphazardly edited New York-based drama of shifting perspectives feels too unfocused and overstuffed for a feature." and same time praised Truvillion's performance writing: "Thankfully, Truvillion in one of the leading parts is an exception to this overarching shortcoming. As Chris, a good cop in a barrel of bad apples, he puts forth a performance that is in equal parts authentic and tender."[4]
Sandie Angulo Chen from Common Sense Media gave it 3 of 5 stars writing: "Relevant themes and Truvillion's stand-out performance rescue this drama from preachy dialogue and oversimplification of the tensions between Black communities and law enforcement."[5]
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See also
References
External links
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