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Sunday, August 31, 2025

Thoughts on Judgment Night

   Last week I watched Judgment Night on Criterion, a 1993 action film that is much better known for its great soundtrack that is full of rap and metal/rock collaborations, like an Ice T and Slayer song, or a Cypress Hill and Sonic Youth song. I didn’t know what the movie was about, thinking it was a sci-fi action movie. It’s more of a thriller, and is really well-shot with night scenes nearly the whole movie, and there is some really good tension in long sequences.

    The basic plot is that Emilio Estevez is a suburban family man in the North Shore suburbs of Chicago who is going into the city with his friends and brother to see a boxing match, and there’s all this weird tension where his friends still act immature and want to get into fights, and tell Estevez that he’s “gone soft” because he has a family and doesn’t want to get into reckless fights. The guys end up driving off the expressway to get out of traffic to get to the fight, only to end up in some desolate rough area, where they accidentally witness a gang-related shooting, done by Denis Leary’s crime boss character, and spend the whole movie trying to escape Denis Leary and his crew (one of them played by Everlast, who was in House of Pain at the time and was on the soundtrack), sneaking into a train yard and a housing projects building and empty streets and alleys.

    It works pretty well, even if I felt like the movie was trying to have some kind of arc with Emilio having been a rough punk and having to tap into his violent side to survive, and it didn’t seem fleshed out. But Denis Leary was fun as the bad guy, even if it felt like he was the same character he was playing in Demolition Man that same year, same pissed-off underground leader guy who hates rich people.
    Michael DeLorenzo had a small part as the guy who gets killed early on, and is called “the kid,” even though he was in his mid-30s at the time.
    Between this and Very Bad Things, I thought “Nobody should ever invite Jeremy Piven on a guys’ night out, because he will be the catalyst for things going wrong.”

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