Critic scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating more favorable reviews.
The best scenes are filmed inside the cruiser, dashboard shots that face inward instead of out, catching Gyllenhaal and Peña in moments so playful and true they make all other buddy cops look bogus by comparison. Read full review
Nerve-rattling in the best way, the sharp, visceral urban police procedural End of Watch is one of the best American cop movies I've seen in a long time. Read full review
David Ayer, the writer of "Training Day," director of "Street Kings," writer/director of "Harsh Times," does not make movies about princesses with witchy curses, about yuppie commitment-phobes, about talking plush toys. His territory is narrow, but he owns it: cops, in Los Angeles. Read full review
If Ayer had taken as much care with his bad guys as he does with his leads (and their deftly sketched wives and colleagues, played by Anna Kendrick, America Ferrera and Frank Grillo, among others), he might have crafted a seamless picture. Read full review
The two cops are cocky and funny and young, and it still takes a good half hour to accept that they may be as forthright and dedicated to their jobs as they appear to be. Read full review
Unlike many action thrillers where the viewer is fairly certain that no real harm can come to the protagonists, such is never the case here. In this gritty ride-along, we sense that anything can happen, which adds to the propulsive momentum of a riveting story. Read full review
In the last 15 minutes of the film, he burns up some of the credibility he established by not pushing extreme situations too far earlier on. Read full review
End of Watch gives you the savage whoosh of being on a job that can get you killed. Sins of cop clichés can be forgiven when a movie pays honest tribute to police on the line. Read full review
The camera is just everywhere, from the point of view of everything. When I left the movie the other night, people complained of seasickness. Read full review
Shallow down inside, End of Watch is a music-video Frappuccino of quick cuts, sparkling banter, serial crises, grisly violence and tongue-jerk profanity. But the film is exciting, in its manipulative way, and exhausting. Read full review
3.5
Dave White Profile
Dark Blue meets YouTube Read full review
Exclusive Cast Interviews Director David Ayer and star Michael Pena talk about the brotherhood of cops, the grueling training preparation and Pena fighting with a busted nose. Cine Latino: 20 Hispanics Who Have Conquered Hollywood In celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month we put together a list of 20 Hispanic actors and filmmakers who have influenced the Latino landscape in Hollywood.