Corrupt cops, drug deals and brilliant dialogue. You really need to see this hidden gem.
If a film is going to be compared to Martin Scorsese’s masterpiece, it better be good. Damn good.
Thankfully, The Seven Five, is just that because it’s an absolutely remarkable story. How does a decent cop go from protecting the peace to being one of the most feared gangsters in the five boroughs?
Tiller Russell’s documentary tells the story of Michael Dowd, more commonly known as ‘the dirtiest cop in New York City history’. In the 1980s, Dowd patrolled the mean streets of one of the toughest precincts in Brooklyn. He also headed a ruthless criminal network that stole money and drugs, ultimately resulting in the city’s biggest ever corruption scandal. In this explosive true crime saga, Dowd tells all as he relives his days as a mobster with a badge.
In their review of the film, The New York Post absolutely loved the “priceless dialogue, the bitter ironies, the magnificently skeevy cast of characters and even the overall structure that make The Seven Five Goodfellas in blue. Director Tiller Russell, a disciple of Martin Scorsese right down to the freeze-frames and the Rolling Stones music, lands knockout interviews.”
Empire also remarked on its similarity with Goodfellas when they described The Seven Five as a “siren-flash of a film, charged up in the edit like a true-crime Goodfellas.”
Take a look at the trailer.
Trust us, it’s definitely worth your time.
The Seven Five airs on Film 4 this Saturday at 1.40am (so, after midnight on Friday, for all you night-owls).