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The Detective
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Directed by Gordon M. Douglas.
Frank Sinatra gives a gritty performance in the crime thriller The Detective. When Teddy Leikman, the homosexual son of a politically connected department-store magnate, is murdered, detective Joe Leland (Frank Sinatra) is sent in to investigate. Leland drags in Teddy's psychotic former roommate Felix Tesla (Tony Musante) and forces a confession out of him; for his work on the case Leland gets a promotion, which troubles him. Afterwards, Norma MacIver (Jacqueline Bisset), the widow of a well-heeled accountant, comes to see Leland. Her husband was killed after falling off the grandstand at a racetrack -- but Norma thinks he was pushed. She asks Leland to investigate her husband's death. Reopening the case, Leland discovers that the police are opposed to him scratching around any further, and after an attempt on his life, he uncovers some startling evidence that may connect the two deaths. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
A lurid, jumbled storyline and a Frank Sinatra-on-autopilot performance are major setbacks for this ambitious -- if reactionary -- late-'60s crime thriller. Though it predates the notorious Cruising by more than a decade, The Detective peppers its plot with the grisly particulars of a murder of a young, prominent gay man in Manhattan. As if flinching from the initially shocking material, screenwriter Abby Mann (adapting Roderick Thorp's bestseller) then delves into a lengthy, confusing flashback recalling hero Joe Leland's (Sinatra) relationship with his (literally) nymphomaniacal ex (Lee Remick) and his steady ascent up the ranks of the NYPD. Police corruption, property-ownership conspiracy, and junkie pathos are all thrown in as bait-and-switch techniques before the inevitable return to the crime that opened the film, by which point, most viewers will have stopped caring. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide
 



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