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The
Big Easy (1987)
In director Jim McBride's romantic, neo-noir crime and
romantic mystery-thriller - it told about a suspected deadly drug war
in the "Big Easy" city of New Orleans, LA between Mafia mobsters
and African-American drug lords. During an uptick in gangland
murders involved in the drug peddling trade, two officers or representatives
of the law became both intrigued and at odds with each other over the
issue of police corruption, as reflected in the film's two taglines: "He's
got to hide the truth. She'll stop at nothing to find it. But tonight
everything's off the record," and "It's
easy to make a killing in New Orleans..."
On a budget of $8.5 million, the film successfully grossed
a total of $17.7 million. About a decade later, the film was developed
into a spin-off TV series of 35 episodes for two seasons (from August
1996-October 1997), airing on the USA Network.
- the film's title sequence consisted of a helicopter
aerial shot over the New Orleans bayou, accompanied by the lively "Zydeco
Gris Gris" - played by the cajun band BeauSoleil featuring duelling fiddles
- as the film opened, Remy McSwain
(Dennis Quaid), a brash but easy-going, talkative and good-natured
New Orleans Cajun police lieutenant-detective in the Homicide Division
was investigating a murder, occurring during a deadly drug war in
the city; at 2 in the morning, he was at the scene of the murder
of local mobster-gangster Freddie Angelo (Jim Chimento) (a "wise-guy
scumbag"), whose body was found floating in a fountain at Piazza
D'Italia in downtown New Orleans; Angelo's employer was Mafia kingpin
and Italian-American Vinnie "The Cannon" DiMotti (Marc Lawrence);
Remy conferred about the crime hit with fellow officer
McCabe (Lisa Jane Persky) and his boss Police Captain
Jack Kellom (Ned Beatty)
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Assistant DA Anne Osborne (Ellen Barkin) - Head of
a Special Task Force to Investigate Police Corruption
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- the next morning, after Remy entered his homicide
office, Captain Kellom was playfully berating two of his officers,
detective Ed Dodge (Ebbe Roe Smith) and Andre
DeSoto (John Goodman), for wasting their time during a boat impoundment at the police dock - an important
throwaway line but crucial in future developments
- Remy was informed that the state's
crusading ADA Anne Osborne (Ellen Barkin), from "out of town," was
waiting in Remy's office to speak to him; he
responded with two words: "Nice neck!"; she was a straight-arrow
outsider in charge of an official task force on police corruption and
reports of bribery and money laundering; she was investigating
a possible case of crooked cops - officers who were secretly on a murder
spree to take over the burgeoning heroin drug market; she had been
summoned after the shooting death of "wise-guy" mobster Freddie Angelo
- in his office, after Remy's light questioning and
quick release of mob boss Vinnie DiMotti about Freddie Angelo’s
murder, Anne challenged Remy's tactics with the high-ranking Mafia
boss ("You kissed his ass"); she revealed her uncompromising viewpoint
and challenged his ineffective methods; he rationalized
that she didn't understand how the system operated: ("You're not from
here, are you?")
- Remy bargained with the uptight but sexy prosecutor
Anne - he would take her to dinner and tell her more about how he
would bring justice to the mobsters in the Angelo murder case; on
their first dinner date at Tipitina's - a Cajun dance hall-restaurant,
she realized how the unorthodox Remy was taking advantage of "perks"
through his job - parking at a fire hydrant outside the restaurant,
cutting into the line, and no charge for dinners; she
implicity accused him of being on the 'take,' and clearly admitted:
"I'm not embarrassed to put bad cops behind bars"
- after leaving the restaurant, Anne
was apprehensive about him and asserted herself, asking about his perks:
("You honestly don't see the harm in any of this?"); Remy attempted
to defend himself: "This is New Orleans, darlin'. Folks have a certain
way of doin' things down here. People like to show their appreciation";
he deliberately ran a red-light to aggravate her; she kept criticizing
his way of doing things: "How far does all this stuff go, huh? What,
is everything for sale? What's it cost to beat a murder rap these
days?...I've never seen one person break so many laws in such a short
space of time" - although he regarded himself one of the "good guys,"
who was fighting the "bad guys"
- she abruptly ended their date; he dropped her off
at a corner market to pick up a few things; and then as she walked
home, Anne became involved in an attempted mugging of an elderly
woman by two black assailants, and Remy came to their rescue
- the next day, she phoned him, and confidently insisted
that they should keep their relationship "strictly professional" and
avoid any possibility of a "conflict of interest";
it marked the start of an antagonistic love-hate relationship; at
the end of the work-day, he drove by her place of work and told her
that he had his report on Angelo - but it was sitting underneath
a large pepperoni pizza in a box he was holding: ("You got to eat
the pie to get to the report")
- in the next scene after the two had consumed the pizza
at her place, she complimented him on his report; as she asked for
more details, he informed her how the deceased victim Angelo's car
was parked across the street from a wharf warehouse owned by DiMotti's
hitman Carmine Tandino; Remy suspected that Angelo was storing millions
of dollars worth of smuggled heroin in Tandino's dockside warehouse
(the drugs had been transported by water); she was impressed, but
he still felt she didn't trust him: "You think I'm a rotten,
don't-give-a-s--t, dishonest, no-good, dirty cop. Is that what you
think of me?"
- due to Remy's persistence and despite Anne's resistance,
the two unlikely and uptight romantic partners began to develop a
volatile love affair; they unexpectedly came together and kissed; the
detective let down Anne's blonde hair and caressed her under her clothes;
it was a clumsy and awkward, but realistic sex scene
(praised by critics) in his bedroom - to the tune of "Closer to
You" (performed by Quaid himself), even though they were fully clothed
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First Sexual Experience - Anne: "I'm
too nervous. I can't relax"
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Remy Interrupted by His Beeper: (Anne: "I never did
have much luck with sex anyway"
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- but after a few moments,
the highly-repressed Anne nervously confessed that she was very anxious: "I'm
not very good at this....I can't do this now, Remy, I'm too nervous. I can't relax. I'm very
embarrassed"; he tried to calm her: "Just relax, darlin'.
This is the Big Easy. Folks have a certain way of doing things down
here"; they had a short and humorous back-and-forth about his
approach as he touched and kissed her, ultimately causing her to
moan: Anne: "Oh, stop that!" Remy: "Stop what?" Anne: "That."
Remy: "What?" Anne: "That." Remy: "What,
that, or that?"; he climbed up over her
and laid atop her, as she helped lower his pants as they began to
have sex, but the sex was unconsummated and aborted when his pager beeped
- Remy learned over the phone
that he must report to the scene of a triple murder in the neighborhood
of Storyville; when he apologized, she admitted: "It's
okay. I never did have much luck with sex anyway"; he
passionately responded with a kiss: "Your luck is about to change,
cher. (after a parting kiss) Oh boy, ooo-la-la!"; she said she
would await his return in a few hours
- at the crime scene where upset black locals had
gathered, Remy's boss Captain Kellom heard rumored street talk from
some black dudes that Angelo's killers were seen in an unmarked police
car; there were three bloody victims in the Storyville house - both
Remy and Kellom reported that the three drug-running victims were
employed by African-American drug crime lord and voodoo priest Daddy
Mention (Solomon Burke, a soul/blues singer), a rival
to the white drug-dealing by DiMotti
- due to allegations of police officer involvement (specifically,
two unknown white male suspects in an unmarked police car), Anne
also unexpectedly appeared on the bloody scene; however, according
to the cops on the scene, it looked like intensifying
gang-warfare between the rival white Mafia and black drug lords;
the victims were allegedly members of Daddy Mention's black gang
of drug-dealers; Remy believed that the cops weren't involved: ("Because
if they were cops, they would have stayed right here. When we arrived,
we would have found plants: guns, knives, all kinds of evidence that
they resisted arrest. Something every cop in the world knows how to do")
- from a closet, during a timely coincidence, Lt. Dodge
(with an ill-fitting toupee) pulled out a kilo package of Mexican
brown heroin; Remy hypothesized that the three murders were committed
by DiMotti's vengeful Mafia hitman Tandino as payback for Angelo’s
death, based upon the MO: "Shotguns are his signature"
- afterwards, Remy and the squeamish Anne returned to
his apartment to continue where they left off, although she was sickened
and nauseated by the sight of the bloody killings, and was puking
into his toilet bowl; they continued to speculate about the motives and
participants in the murders, as Remy continued to insist that the
cops weren't involved: "Cops don't do that
sort of thing. Not even the rad cops. You're always accusing the
cops of everything"; however, Anne was
much more uncertain and suspected police involvement
- Remy warned: "Look out for the gator, baby!" (referring
to his green stuffed animal) and playfully chased after her as she
fled to the bedroom, and he pulled off her clothing
- the next morning, she was half-draped and covered her
nakedness in a blue sheet from their empty bed and approached 'McSwain' from behind, as he bent down in
front of the refrigerator; she grabbed him from behind between his
legs, causing him to jump - and realized with shock and embarrassment
that it was Remy's younger brother Bobby (Tom O'Brien) instead!;
she hurriedly fled from his 2nd floor apartment, and passed Remy
returning with a bag of breakfast groceries, with the excuse that
she was late for work
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The Next Morning - An Embarrassing Incident
With Remy's Younger Brother Bobby (Tom O'Brien)
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- the next day at work, Remy was informed that Freddie
Angelo's stolen driver's license ID was found in the pocket of one of
the bloodied black victims in Storyville - possibly confirming Remy's
theory of racial gang-warfare; and then Officer McCabe also told
Remy that suspected hitman Tandino had an "airtight" alibi
for his whereabouts at the time of Angelo's murder; he also received
a phone call from Anne apologizing for running off: "I'm just
sort of confused....Things like last night don't happen to me";
she abruptly hung up on him; his co-workers suspected that Remy was
being 'used' by Anne to gather evidence against the cops in the office
- shortly later - during a major frame-up or set-up
to derail Remy and Anne's fact-finding efforts, co-worker detective
Ed Dodge sent Remy (in Capt. Kellom's place) to the
Club Sho-Bar on Bourbon Street to speak to the new but uncooperative
bartender/owner George Joel (Eliott Keener), who openly resented
the police's regular shakedowns of his business; he complained about
being pressured to contribute to the police's so-called corrupt and
fraudulent "Widows and Orphans Fund" - a way for the cops to illegally cover-up
their extortion and laundering of cash from local businesses
- Remy was handed an envelope with a payoff of $400
cash stuffed into his hand by Joel, and suddenly realized that he
had been set-up; he threw the 8 $50 bills into the air as he fled
outside, where he was arrested during an FBI Internal Affairs sting
operation for extortion and bribery, and told: "We've got everything
on video tape"
- Remy's boss Police Captain Jack Kellom, who was the
real target of the sting operation, briefly tried to reassure Remy
and promised him that he would be fully defended in court by his
unscrupulous defense attorney Lamar Parmentel (Charles Ludlam) and
wouldn't suffer the consequences: "We
take care of our own, remember that"; it appeared Remy would
be tried for bribery, but there were grounds for charging that Remy
was improperly set-up: ("It skirts the edge of entrapment")
- during an arraignment before a Judge (Carol Sutton),
Remy's bail was reduced from $50,000 to $500, and his case was given
a priority hearing in two days before Judge Garrison (Jim Garrison
as Himself); in the meantime, Remy (in disguise) acquired an industrial
nickel magnet from a Magnet Salesman (Peter Gabb)
- [Note: Remy justified his illegally-acquired funds
to pay for his younger brother's college tuition, but also admitted
to him: "I've been on the take in little-bitty ways since practically
the first day on the job."]
Judge Garrison (Jim Garrison as Himself)
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Defense Attorney Lamar Parmentel (Charles Ludlam)
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Prosecuting Attorney Anne Osborne
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- after the first day of testimony in which Prosecuting
Attorney Anne faced off against Remy in court, news arrived that
DiMotti's hitman Carmine Tandino had been incinerated after a violent
explosion inside his own warehouse at the wharf (where it was
rumored that drugs were being stored by Angelo); all of the principals
ended up at the night-time crime scene, where it was apparent that
Tandino's heart had been ripped right out of his chest, suggesting
a voodoo ritual and pointing at drug rival Daddy Mention, a black
magic voodoo priest
- during the second day of testimony, a frustrated
Anne was unable to proceed when it was discovered that the videotape
evidence had been tampered with, by the accidental placement of a
high-powered magnet next to the tapes in the police property room;
Remy had received cooperative help from his colleague - police property
manager Dewey Piersall (Steve Broussard); Remy was cleared of the
charges against him and released; in celebration of the acquittal,
Captain Kellom organized a Cajun BBQ and Dance-Music Fest for the
department, where he announced: "Every once in a while justice triumphs"
Captain Kellom at Remy's Acquittal BBQ-Party and Dance-Music Fest
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Anne Brought to the Acquittal Party, Under False Pretenses
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"Why don't you call me anymore?"
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Anne to Remy: "You're not one of the good guys anymore"
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- Anne was picked up (kidnapped) and charged with arrest
while jogging - but under false pretenses, and was brought to accompany
Remy at the dance and music fest, although she was miffed at being
brought there; she listened as he played lead guitar in the band,
and directed the lyrics of "You Used to Call Me" toward her: "Why
don't you call me anymore?"
- after being talked into a brief dance with him, Anne
expressed how angry she was that he was
enjoying favors in the city due to his position; she
chastised him after he had been unjustly acquitted, for not being
very convincing as a 'good guy': "You're
a cop, for God's sake. You're supposed to uphold the law, but instead
you bend it and twist it and sell it. I saw you take that bribe and,
and resist arrest and tamper with evidence and perjure yourself under
oath...Why don't you just face it, Remy? You're not one of the good
guys anymore"; she departed from the party in a taxi; with a
twinge of conscience, the next day at work, Remy requested to be
removed from the 'Widows and Orphans Fund'
- during a meeting with other officers in Remy's office,
it was announced that two convicted drug smugglers - Mexican deep-sea
fisherman from Vera Cruz - had been found floating dead in the New
Orleans canal, after suffering from acute lead poisoning [Note: They
were related to the impounded Mexican boat in the opening scene];
the Mexicans' last phone call was from Freddie Angelo who was in
Vera Cruz three days before he was killed; Remy was suspicious why
the drug warfare was getting bloodier and more competitive between
the two groups for the drug business led by DiMotti and Daddy Mention, since
they had only found one kilo of heroin at the Storyville crime scene;
he asked: "One kilo of heroin always seemed kind of small time for
all these people to get killed over. But 20 or 30 kilos, that makes
a lot more sense. So where's the rest of it, huh? Anybody talk
to Daddy Mention?"; Remy began to conclude that Anne's intuitions
about police corruption were uncannily accurate: "Daddy Mention is
trying to move in on Vinnie's action. That sounds neat, but I don't
buy it no more"
- both Anne and defense attorney Lamar were able to
speak to Daddy Mention at his church before Remy arrived; Mention
referenced the two Italian murders (Angelo and Tandino) and the three
blacks killed in Storyville; however, he firmly disavowed the idea
that there was gang warfare: ("The police are putting out this story
that there is a gang war going on...My people didn't kill no Freddy
Angelo or no, what's his name Tandino, and cut his heart out... I
know they're killing my people too")
- Remy also arrived to speak to Daddy
Mention and was surprised to see Lamar and Anne there; suddenly,
there was the sound of gunfire, and Mention was murdered outside
his property by shots from two men in an unmarked police car that sped away; both
Anne and Remy failed in attempting to stop the vehicle
- Remy reached out to Anne about her assumptions
that there was no gang warfare; she explained
her evidence - an eyewitness had reported that two cops (in an unmarked
car - with a blue light and radio in the front seat) were also responsible
for the murder of Angelo ("The police are the suspects!"); he finally
agreed with her: "There isn't no gang warfare, is there?"); it was
clear to both of them that the cops' goal was to divert attention
and blame away from their own illegal heroin drug thefts
- Remy encouraged Anne's efforts to investigate his
own colleagues; with his support, she submitted a search warrant
to Captain Kellom in the police station, and an exhaustive search
commenced; the two located the unmarked getaway police car in the
lot that was used for the Daddy Mention murder; late into the night
in Remy's apartment, the two perused boxes of papers confiscated
from the department; since it was late, she was talked into staying
for the night in his place - without any "cha-cha"; as he settled
for sleeping on the couch, he asked: "If I can't have you, can I
have my gator?"
- the next morning, Remy realized he was being targeted
as retribution for turning against his own, when his brother Bobby was
mistaken for him - and shot in the chest outside the apartment
- at the hospital while awaiting word on Bobby's condition,
Remy had a heart-to-heart talk about "police business" with his boss
Captain Kellom; Remy confronted his boss about evidence of tampered
logs: "Vehicle logs, patrol logs, arrest logs. All different departments....Only
someone in command has access to the files"; it was an awkward conversation
because the Captain was engaged to marry Remy's Mama (Grace Zabriskie);
Remy accused Kellom of criminal activity:
"You've been behind this thing all the way from the beginning, weren't
you, huh?"; Kellom admitted to Remy that he had taken Angelo's $5
million stockpile of Mexican heroin in Tandino's warehouse for himself,
but wouldn't implicate anyone else in the department; Remy refused
to be bribed by accepting a "fair slice" of the "very big pie"
- after Kellom ran off in disgrace, Remy explained his guilty confession to
Anne, who asked: "Somebody is pulling that trigger for him. Don't
you have any idea who it is?"; to finally come clean with Anne, Remy
also confessed that he had destroyed the videotape evidence against himself; and he also
finally admitted that he had been duped by "the system" and had been
"a bag man for Kellom" - he rationalized and justified for himself
taking small amounts of cash "here and there" in exchange for doing
"a dirty job" as a cop and deserving "a good life"
- the two decided to join together to confront and end
the corruption within law enforcement; they proceeded
to the dock to check on an impounded Mexican fishing boat located
there (used by Angelo to smuggle heroin for DiMotti's gang from Vera
Cruz) [Note: This was the same fishing boat that had been impounded
by DeSoto and Dodge in the opening sequence, with its two fisherman
found dead in the water.]
Impounded Mexican Fishing Boat with Smuggled Heroin
in Its Hold
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(l to r): Two Corrupt Cops: Ed Dodge (Ebbe Roe Smith)
and Andre DeSoto (John Goodman)
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Captain Kellom Lethally Shot in the Hold With Bags
of Heroin
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Remy and Anne Held at Gunpoint by Dodge and DeSoto
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Remy Firing a Flare Gun at Dodge
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Conclusion: Remy and Anne Married
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- in the film's conclusion, an intense shoot-out broke
out on and around the deck of the boat between Captain Kellom and
his two corrupt 'bad-guy' detectives Andre DeSoto and Ed Dodge, who
were involved in the theft of heroin and were planning to leave
town; in the ship's hold with bags of heroin, Kellom suggested that
they destroy the drugs ("We're dumping it"), but they disagreed and
protested; shot-gunfire from DeSoto lethally injured Kellom in the
chest, just before Anne and Remy arrived
- the two survived being shot by jumping into the water
and climbing onto different vessels, and playing a game of
cat-and-mouse with the two shooters; with his
last dying breath, Kellom shot and killed DeSoto when he attempted
to shoot at Anne next to him; Remy avoided Dodge's gunfire
and shot back with a flare gun to propel him into the water; an earlier
flare shot by Remy had set the boat on fire and caused the Mexican
boat to explode, just after Remy and Anne had fled onto the dock; the
blast destroyed the stash of heroin
- afterwards, Anne reconciled with Remy and in the
film's tacked-on conclusion, they danced in their wedding garb with
each other in a hotel room, as the credits scrolled
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Lt. Remy McSwain (Dennis Quaid) at 2 AM Murder Scene
Police Captain Jack Kellom (Ned Beatty) - Remy's Boss
Officer McCabe (Lisa Jane Persky)
Mafia Kingpin, Italian-American Vinnie "The Cannon" DiMotti (Marc
Lawrence)
First Dance-Dinner Date at Cajun Restaurant Tipitina's Between Anne and
Remy
Remy Rescuing Anne From Two Black Muggers
Remy Expressing Himself to Anne: "You think I'm a rotten...no-good dirty
cop"
Anne and Remy's First Kiss
Awaiting His Return ("Come back")
Anne Also Appeared at the Bloody Storyville Crime Scene, Suspecting
Police Officer Involvement
One of Three Black Victims at the Storyville Shooting - One of Daddy Mention's
Gang Members
At the Crime Scene, Lt. Dodge (Ebbe Roe Smith)
Remy Entering the Club Sho-Bar - Before a Frame-Up
Bar Owner George Joel Complaining to Remy About Police Shakedowns for the "Widows
and Orphans Fund"
After Remy's FBI Sting-Arrest, Captain Kellom Reassured Him: "We take care
of our own, remember that"
The Incriminating Videotape of Remy's Bribery of Bartender George Joel
Anne - Very Conflicted as Remy's Prosecutor in Court on Charges of Police Corruption
Incinerated Corpse of DiMotti's Hitman Tandino in His Warehouse
Drug Crime Lord and Voodoo Priest - Rev. Daddy Mention (Solomon Burke)
Anne to Remy: "The police are the suspects!"
Late at Night, Anne and Remy Studying Boxes of Confiscated Papers From the Police
Department
Anne Staying Overnight in Remy's Place - Without Sex
Remy Sleeping With His Gator Stuffed Animal
Remy's Younger Brother Bobby Shot as Retribution - Mistaken as Remy
Remy's Mama (Grace Zabriskie), Captain Kellom's Fiancee
Captain Kellom - Who Just Confessed to Remy About Ripping Off Angelo's $5 Million
Worth of Heroin
Remy Confessing His Faults to Anne
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