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"description": "Homicide (Mamet, 1991) is on Blu-ray from Imprint Films.",
"path": "/p/something-to-watch-tonight-homicide/",
"publishedAt": "2026-06-03T00:44:31.000Z",
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"tags": [
"david mamet",
"homicide (1991)",
"joe mantegna",
"Newsletter",
"Physical Media"
],
"textContent": "We don’t talk much about David Mamet these days but for a while he was all the rage. Mamet regular Joe Mantegna plays Bobby Gold, a homicide detective and hostage negotiator who is on his way to a big bust when he comes across a small-time convenience store murder. Because the victim is the elderly Jewish proprietor of the store and Gold is also Jewish (although non-observing and not particularly interested) his bosses take him off the big case and put him on the local one – to his frustration and disappointment. But the plot immediately thickens when Gold discovers evidence that the victim had been trafficking weapons for a Jewish group attempting to defend their community from antisemitic violence. Their fervour appeals to Gold, who struggles to fit in with either the police culture or his ethnic background, and he is unwisely drawn into helping them bomb a neo-Nazi centre and break his own code by handing over evidence in the murder case. Ultimately, he realises that the group’s single-minded, multi-generational, commitment to Zionism (or anti-antisemitism if you want to localise things) might not be consistent with, you know, the rule of law, by which time he’s already dropped the ball on both the investigations he was supposed to be involved with. Mamet was on an absolute tear in this period, Homicide coming after his first two crackerjack features, House of Games and Things Change. The film was nominated for the Palme d’Or that year and is notable for Mamet’s nuanced take on being a Jew in America. His views – shall we say – hardened a lot after 9/11. Where to watch Homicide Physical media: In the Imprint Films After Dark Neo-Noir Collection Three boxset along with White Sands, The Crossing Guard, Heaven’s Prisoners, Under Suspicion and Dirty Pretty Things. Aotearoa: Not currently available online Australia: Digital rental from Google or YouTube Canada: Streaming on Criterion Channel, Hollywood Suite, Crave or CTV (free with ads) Ireland: Not currently available online India: Not currently available online USA: Streaming on Criterion Channel or Fubo UK: Digital rental Further reading Glenn Kenny, wrote about Homicide in 2009 for his blog Some Came Running which is now archived on this site: Of all of Mamet’s self-written feature films, this strikes me as the most thoroughly,well, Mametian in terms of performance style and writing—the flat, almost incantory delivery of dialogue combined with the iambic rhythms and the repetition of phrases: “I’ll find the killer. I’ll find the killer, I swear.” The effect is even more bracing than it was in House of Games, I think in part because House of Games was introducing viewers to an unfamiliar, circumscribed world—the mien of the super-secretive con man—that the viewer had few expectations about as far as behavior was concerned. Much of Homicide takes place in a precinct house and on the street, and the theatricality of the exchanges in these settings we’re familiar with from cop shows and cop movies is bracing, maybe a little alienating at first. But it’s Mamet’s world, and he’s got utter confidence about how things work in it, and the film builds a unique, almost hypnotic power. An unusual picture, a unique picture, one that’s certainly well worth reviving a conversation about.",
"title": "Something to watch tonight: Homicide",
"updatedAt": "2026-06-03T00:47:43.000Z"
}