![]() | for intense thematic material, violence, sexuality, language and some drug references |

Veteran Los Angeles cop Abel Turner guards his neighborhood with the same zeal he brings to his patrol route. The single father of a teenaged daughter and preteen son, Abel is one-man security force, ensuring that his strict standards of behavior are adhered to, even if it means ruffling a few feathers in the process. Chris and Lisa Mattson, a progressive and upwardly mobile couple, move in next door to Turner, who disapproves of their interracial marriage. Hoping to rid the neighborhood of anything or anyone he deems "undesirable," Turner launches an escalating series of pranks and insults against the Mattsons. Abel takes full advantage of his police connections to antagonize his new neighbors with impunity, hoping to get them to pick up and move out.
When their air conditioning unit is sabotaged in the middle of a heat wave and their car tires are mysteriously slashed, the Mattsons begin to suspect Abel is behind their troubles. But without proof, they can only try to negotiate a truce--an offer Abel does not accept. Abel's anger flares when his use of inappropriate force on the job lands him on extended leave and he discovers his daughter has been spending time with Lisa. As Abel crosses the line from annoying neighbor to dangerous adversary, the couple tries to fight back, which only feeds Turner's fury. With the resentment between the neighbors building daily, it's only a matter of time before the situation escalates into a potentially deadly stand off.
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This one literally burns up the screen in a blistering and explosive thriller that keeps you nervously on edge for two solid hours. All kinds of intense! Story Lakeview Terrace pushes a lot of racial buttons in a melodramatic but gripping story of a young interracial couple--Chris (Patrick Wilson) and Lisa Mattson (Kerry Washington)--who move into beautiful new suburban house in a hilly neighborhood of Southern California. Trouble starts when the self-appointed lord of the street, an uptight veteran LAPD officer Abel Turner (Samuel L. Jackson) turns an unkind, suspicious eye toward his new neighbors. As if his relentless patrols up and down the block weren't bad enough, he aims his super bright light right into their bedroom all night long.
When he catches his kids spying on the couple as they make love in their pool, his rage against the pair increases and tensions ratchet up--not helped by a major brush fire threatening homes in the near-distance. Everyone's patience meets a boiling point as the marriage encounters troubles, and Abel's flash-point temper gets him into hot water on his job. As the fires burn closer, the not-so-neighborly conflict careens out of control. Acting The incomparable Jackson is riveting to watch, even if this pretty straightforward role of a controlling, racist cop doesn't pose one of the bigger acting challenges of his career. As Abel, Jackson simply commands our attention every moment he is on screen and dominates the proceedings like few actors can.
You feel his simmering anger and prejudices, although until the final moments there isn't a whole lot of back story to add dimension or complexity to the character. He seems to be what he is with no logical reason for targeting the nice young couple next door. Essentially, this is really a three-character piece, which--save for a few scenes of Jackson at the station or on patrol--is concentrated solely in the cul-de-sac. Making up the other two parts of this triangle, Wilson and Washington are quite believable, both slow to burn until given no other choice. Wilson is treading on territory he explored in Little Children and is quite effective, as you conjure up memories of the young Paul Newman, whom Wilson uncannily resembles, especially when shooting pool.
Washington continues to show the great promise she displayed in Ray and holds her own in this company. Direction Playwright, screenwriter and director Neil LaBute is known for creating tough characters (usually men) and cynical scenarios in his work, so it's easy to see why he might have been attracted to this material, written by David Loughery and Howard Korder. His direction is so tight and even claustrophobic at times making the film feel like it could have been designed for a theatrical production--an area in which LaBute is well versed. The power of the piece comes from the combustible interaction between the three main actors, and the pitch perfect pacing lets the action peak at just the right moments. By slowly building this house of dominoes, LaBute knows just the precise moment to go for the jugular and knock them all down.
In other hands, it all could have been too much, but the director nicely reins things in before unleashing the real fury simmering beneath the surface of this engrossing adult drama. Bottom Line Hollywood.com rated this film 3 stars.-Pete Hammond.
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