Customer Reviews
One of Larry's best early lead performances of the nineties 
2008-04-01
Deep Cover is Fish's third best performances of the early nineties behind Boyz N The Hood and What's Love Got To Do With It. The character he plays in Deep Cover is a smooth cop who gets in over his head when he goes undercover. Jeff Goldblum makea great bad guy and the direction by Bill Duke was also very good following A Rage In Harlem from a year earlier.
Deep Cover 
2008-02-23
Its a great movie about a cop who goes under cover and stays there while at the same time gets caught up in conflict among his peers, and then realizes that he has to make decisions about his future after his rise to power as a drug dealer is swift and easy. Great dialogue and choice of characters to reflect how wide spread the reach of drugs are in every type class.
Classic Fishburne! 
2007-07-03
This is probably the movie that catapulted Laurence Fishburne's career. It is also one of the movies are consider as a follow up to New Jack City. If you are a fan of Fishburne, then this is definitely the movie to have in your collection. It's as deep cover as you can get far as cracking down on the drug game can get.
Deep Cover 
2007-05-14
I consider the song selections very good. Basically, I purchased the CD for the title cut. In my opinion, it is Dr. Dre's and Snoop's best cut together ever.
Solid and well-acted 90's "war on drugs" fantasy - implausible but entertaining 
2006-12-06
The opening scene of this film is probably the best, and sets up nicely the tone of the remainder of the film. It is Christmas time and snowing heavily as a father drives his son to the liquor store, snorts some coke, and then asks the boy what he wants for Christmas. He then robs a liquour store at gunpoint, and is shot in the back in front of his son Russell and next to a fake Santa. The scene captures a nightmare from a child's perspective, that will haunt and inform him until the end. It is a nice example of how an effective opening scene can simultaneously set a tone, develop sympathy for a main character, and (naively and simplistically but memorably) explain a contradictory set of motivations that will drive him throughout the film. He doesn't want to be like his father, so he will want to be straight. But he knows his father loved him, so he won't be quick to judge someone like his father; and he will be looking for a father figure throughout the film. The film is really not so much about drugs as about parenting and the relation of the child to the missing parent.
He finds a surrogate father, at first, in his racist boss at the DEA, where he works. The boss sends him on a mission precisely into the kind of life that his own father had warned him to avoid (by words, if not by example, except for the example of getting himself killed). Yet he continually reminds him that he is doing this effectively to save people like his father. This first surrogate father seems to be everything his father wasn't: educated, successful, and "clean." Still, just as Russell's father asked him to sit by while he committed a crime, Russell's boss asks him to turn away from an investigation when it gets political.
He finds a better father figure in a "preacher" cop, who warns him in the same tone as his father had, but unlike his father practiced what he preached. At the same time, he is one who clearly has faced the demon in himself that he is trying to exorcise in others. Effectively, the movie is about Russell (the lead character played well by Laurence Fishburne) learning to face up to the fact that nothing he does will redeem his father or bring him back, and growing up by not merely avoiding his father's sins but by passing through and beyond them. In the end, he is neither a "straight arrow" or a "lost soul" but is faced with a choice that he poses to the audience, in order to suggest that there are no easy answers to the existential questions faced by those who are caught up in the world that killed Russell's father. (In a subplot, he develops a relationship with a young hispanic boy whose mother is in effectively the same position as was his own father.)
On top of that, Russell is paired with a "brother" of sorts, a lawyer played by Jeff Goldblum, who is in many ways his mirror image. Unlike Russell, David (Goldblum) has everything: a beautiful family, a nice house, a good job. He doesn't do crime, like Russell's father, out of necessity but out of a fascination with the other side, with the criminal element and even (in a not entirely developed but intriguing sub theme) with the idea of being black (he has a black lover, he is fascinated nearly to the point of an erotic attraction by Russell - who he describes in action as a "beautiful beast"). Unlike Russell's father who hated the life of crime that he felt obligated to pursue, David gives up his family to pursue the dark life of crime for its own sake. It is against this "double" that Russell defines himself -- refusing in the end to be a criminal and insisting that he is still a cop.
Sure it's simplistic, but it's a fun and entertaining film, that plays with the psychology of motivation and with moral questions that are inevitable in the "war on drugs" (or the "war on terror," for that matter). The directing is solid and some scenes like the first one are quite good. The script is engaging and mostly clever, with convincing characterizations. The reversals in the story and the fact it uses a grand scheme to address highly personal issues of morality and choice are to be expected from a film that was co-scripted by Michael Tolkin -- who also wrote Altman's "The Player" and wrote and directed "The Rapture." There are some extraneous side plots here and there, and both the DEA and the mafia didn't seem very well developed or plausible. For that matter, the idea that with a little bit of luck and a charismatic "tough" attitude one can get to the top of the drug mafia food chain in a matter of weeks or months is sheer fantasy (of a sort that makes "Miami Vice" look realistic). Still, the fantasy elements are really subordinate to the personal story of a boy facing up the consequences and implications of a tragic childhood event. Worth seeing if you can get in to this kind of thing.
Laurence Fishburne Catapults to Stardom 
2006-10-26
A cop with the psychological profile of a criminal goes undercover and finds himself caught up in his criminal life.
Genre: Feature Film-Action/Adventure
Rating: R
Release Date: 15-AUG-2000
Media Type: DVD
Do you know the Jungle's Creed ? 
2006-09-25
I love good underrated movies, they make you feel like you're part of a priviledge club of connoisseurs. I'm not a movie buff, but Deep Cover has all the elements you would expect of a classic : great acting, memorable lines, interesting ( and logical ) plot and a decent ending.
Laurence Fishburne is at his best in his role of an undercover cop slowly crossing the line between pretending to be a drug dealer and pretending to be a cop. Jeff Golblum is one of those actors you either love or hate, and I loved him playing the dirty lawyer laundering drug money. There's a great chemistry between the two and the supporting cast, which to me, was one of the main weakness of New Jack City.
The use of Laurence Fishburne's character as the narrator works wonder, and somewhere between the slow, dark wailings of the movie theme, the nightime shots of downtown LA and Laurence Fishburn's poetic lines, the movie grabs you into a world, an urban jungle, crowded with nightime vultures, heartless killers and hopeless junkies. Deep Cover is somewhere between Fables and magical realism, a place where reality exceeds fiction.
A great movie, the DVD is so so, almost no extras, and the picture quality is good, without being great.
Good Deal 
2006-07-28
I was quite happy with this sale. The response time was quick and the movie was in great condition.
Under appreciated 
2006-06-20
Deep cover does in fact age well. Others have commented on Fishburne's solid performance but no one seems to have appreciated how good Jeff Goldblum was. He was the perfect counterfoil as a wannabe badboy. The movie was well directed and keeps you interested all the way through. The characters are mostly well fleshed out. The ending is a bit watery but you flow with it. Lots of memorable scenes.
Laurence Fishburne was excellent in this well made crime 
2006-04-04
drama that didn't get much plugging by the studio. Larry is a straight arrow cop who goes undercover at the request of a corrupt FBI agent (is there any other kind?) Larry believes the line that agent gives him, that he can help "clean up the streets" by becoming a undercover cop turned drug dealer, doing the dirty work for the FBI. Jeff Goldblum, at his slimy best, plays a corrupt lawyer who gets street dealers off so they can continue working on the streets selling for him and his scummy associates. I think if this film got more publicity it would have been a big hit. Enjoy!