Sleeping Dogs

2024

Crime / Mystery / Thriller

65
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 36% · 33 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 82% · 50 ratings
IMDb Rating 5.9/10 10 1841 1.8K

Plot summary

Roy Freeman, an ex-homicide detective with a fractured memory, is forced to revisit a case he can't remember. As a man's life hangs in the balance on death row, Freeman must piece together the brutal evidence from a decade-old murder investigation, uncovering a sinister web of buried secrets and betrayals linking to his past. With only instincts to trust, he faces a chilling truth - sometimes, it's best to let sleeping dogs lie.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
April 11, 2024 at 05:53 PM

Director

Top cast

Russell Crowe as Roy Freeman
Karen Gillan as Laura Baines
Tommy Flanagan as Jimmy Remis
Marton Csokas as Joseph Wieder
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB 1080p.WEB.x265 2160p.WEB.x265
1 GB
1280*534
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 51 min
Seeds 100+
2.06 GB
1920*800
English 5.1
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 51 min
Seeds 100+
1.86 GB
1920*800
English 5.1
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 51 min
Seeds 100+
4.98 GB
3838*1608
English 5.1
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 51 min
Seeds 100+

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by italiacaca 5 / 10

Sleeeeeeping something

Well what can I say, not much of a thriller to me as more of a criminal mystery.the movie seemed very interesting and it was until about half way when I just found it so so slow, un interesting and un realistic. I found my self dozing off during periods of the movie. Thanks to Russell Crowe keeping me a bit engaged with his acting and abilities to do so. This movie started falling apart to me and had the potential to be and do so much more. Endings to these movies never amaze me, and this one is exactly the same, see it once you would know what I am talking about always the same amnesia....b+.

Reviewed by bombersflyup 3 / 10

Sleeping is right.

In Sleeping Dogs, an ex-homicide detective with memory loss is forced to solve a brutal murder, only to uncover chilling secrets from his forgotten past.

Here Russell Crowe slowly pieces together the puzzle of his own case, which he wish he hadn't. Another "Manchurian Candidate" type plot, unfortunately it wasn't good then and it isn't good now. Dragged out quite a bit and rather sleep-inducing, as all these types of film's are. The last portion redeems it somewhat, if you make it that far or like in my case are willing to go back and re-watch because you fell asleep. Though I wouldn't recommend the film.

Reviewed by ferguson-6 6 / 10

Crowe and cast keep us hanging in

Greetings again from the darkness. It's easy to forget that Russell Crowe was once Oscar nominated three years in a row, winning Best Actor for Ridley Scott's epic, GLADIATOR (2000), and has probably deserved two or three additional nominations. His reputation has not won him many industry friends over the years, but to his credit, he keeps plugging away - some minor roles in big films, and some lead roles in smaller films. Crowe can still command the screen with his presence, even when the material is slight (see THE POPE'S EXORCIST, 2023).

This project from writer-director Adam Cooper (writer, EXODUS: GODS AND KINGS, 2014) and his frequent writing partner Bill Collage has been adapted from Eugen O. Chirovici's 2017 novel, "The Book of Mirrors". It's Cooper's directorial debut, and it's entertaining enough, especially if one can avoid comparisons to other similar crime drama films, especially the classic MEMENTO (2000). In this one, Crowe stars as Roy Freeman, a former homicide detective who lost his badge after a drunk driving accident. He has recently undergone an experimental brain procedure designed to help him regain some of the memories Alzheimer's has robbed him of. Roy's apartment has notes posted everywhere. These notes remind him of his name, remind him of his shoe size, and remind him that his Hungry Man dinners are hot when they come out of the microwave. Turns out, it's too late for a note to remind him not to put the TV remote in that same mircrowave.

A ten year old case he worked is brought up by a group looking to prevent an innocent man from being executed. Roy has no memory of the case, so he re-visits the files and tracks down his old partner, Jimmy Remis (played by Tommy Flanagan, in a reunion of GLADIATOR actors). What follows is a sufficiently intricate web of characters to keep us interested and guessing. The murder victim was Professor Wieder (Marton Csokas), and the usual suspects include his PTSD-suffering handyman Wayne Devereaux (Thomas M Wright), Wieder's research assistant and lover Laura Baines (Karen Gillan, Nebula in the Marvel Universe), Laura's other lover Richard Finn (Harry Greenwood) who is writing a book on the murder, and a couple other characters tossed in to knock Roy and us off track.

Flanagan and Csokas are two of my favorite character actors - both always bring something interesting to their roles, and here it's Gillan's Laura that seems to offer the most intrigue - changing names, locales, and personalities, all while publishing a book on a theory of how 'bad' memories can be replaced with good ones, or erased altogether (think of another classic film, ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND, 2004). Roy's flashbacks are handled by quick spurts of moments that he struggles to assemble, which allows us to struggle right alongside him. Roy's plight leaves us with the thought that it's possible to find yourself, and not like what you see. Memory is obviously crucial to the story, and for a second-level crime thriller, there is enough here to keep us going until the conclusion.

In theaters beginning March 22, 2024.

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