Lakeview Terrace

Lakeview Terrace

2008 "What Could Be Safer Than Living Next to a Cop?"
Lakeview Terrace
Lakeview Terrace

Lakeview Terrace

6.2 | 1h50m | PG-13 | en | Drama

A young interracial couple has just moved into their California dream home when they become the target of their next-door neighbor, who disapproves of their relationship. A tightly wound LAPD officer has appointed himself the watchdog of the neighborhood. His nightly foot patrols and overly watchful eyes bring comfort to some, but he becomes increasingly aggressive to the newlyweds. These persistent intrusions into their lives cause the couple to fight back.

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6.2 | 1h50m | PG-13 | en | Drama , Thriller , Crime | More Info
Released: September. 19,2008 | Released Producted By: Overbrook Entertainment , Screen Gems Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

A young interracial couple has just moved into their California dream home when they become the target of their next-door neighbor, who disapproves of their relationship. A tightly wound LAPD officer has appointed himself the watchdog of the neighborhood. His nightly foot patrols and overly watchful eyes bring comfort to some, but he becomes increasingly aggressive to the newlyweds. These persistent intrusions into their lives cause the couple to fight back.

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Cast

Samuel L. Jackson , Patrick Wilson , Kerry Washington

Director

Meg Harker

Producted By

Overbrook Entertainment , Screen Gems

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Reviews

lizziechow With so many lengthy reviews already written, it's hard to add anything new. Like many, I thought this deserved more stars than the average number it has received. A.T's suspicions of his wife's infidelity with a white man makes the movie's story-line plausible. It's easy to understand his motivations, even as I wished the cinematography could be a little bit more sympathetic towards his story (to give the story more depth). While the film got us riled up against an "old man"/"conservative" who couldn't and wouldn't accept an interracial marriage, a closer viewing brings into perspective the class disparity between the two families on Lakeview Terrace. A.T doesn't have a pool, but the interracial couple does. It is also the backdrop of many turning points in the film. I watched this on HBOHD many years (almost 10 years) after it was released, and was struck by how little human nature has remained constant in comparison to the changes in technology (a flip phone). The psychology exhibited in this thriller is even more relevant today, and I feel it is what makes this a movie worth watching.
estebangonzalez10 "It's his word against yours. And he has, let's say, the color issue on his side. And that color happens to be blue."Lakeview Terrace is a thriller that some consider to be underrated. This film has always been on my radar after reading Roger Ebert's four star review, but most critics didn't really dig this film. I wasn't blown away by it like Ebert, but I still enjoyed this suspenseful thriller thanks mostly to Samuel L. Jackson's crazy eyed performance. If someone you know is complaining about their neighbors, then recommend them this film and I guarantee you they will never complain again. Compared to director, Neil LaBute's, previous film, The Wicker Man, this is a masterpiece. The film does manage to maintain a certain level of suspense and the characters are well developed, but the final act is a bit of a letdown. The film lacks some subtlety at times, but it did keep me at the edge of my seat throughout most of its running time. LaBute wasn't afraid to hold back on the racial comments and Jackson's character was very outspoken about it; he definitely succeeds at making the audience feel uncomfortable with several remarks. Chris Mattson (Patrick Wilson) and his wife Lisa (Kerry Washington), arrive to their new home in sunny California despite the news reports of several wildfires across the area. They are a recently married couple and are excited about having purchased their first home together. Lisa's father (Ron Glass) is ready to head back home after having finished helping with all the moving, meanwhile Chris and Lisa meet their new neighbor, Abel (Samuel L. Jackson), who happens to be an LA police officer and so they feel even more secure about their purchase. What they never see coming however is that Abel is a very strict man who doesn't approve of their interracial marriage. Not feeling comfortable with their presence, Abel who lives with his son Marcus (Jaishon Fisher) and daughter Celia (Regine Nehy), begins to bully and threaten them in order to force them to move out of their new home. Abel also happens to be experiencing some struggles of his own back at work for his abusive behavior, so this cop doesn't seem to be the one you want to live close to.Samuel L. Jackson is known mostly for playing a good guy in his movies, so getting to see him in this very different role felt like a breath of fresh air. He gives a terrifying performance here and his presence always made me feel uncomfortable. Patrick Wilson and Kerry Washington also gave strong performances for a thriller like this considering they weren't the perfect couple. They each had flaws and their characters were developed really well. Unfortunately the movie doesn't end on a strong note and that is what ultimately brought it down for me. I still think this film is worth seeing for Samuel L. Jackson's performance, he carries the movie throughout its weak moments. The story may sound familiar considering it is a conventional thriller, but there are moments thanks mostly to the strong performances and well developed characters, that make this film stand above other films in its genre.
g-bodyl Lakeview Terrace is not a bad thriller at all. In fact, it's better than most thrillers that comes out in the fall season. This movie kept me tense the whole time. However, this movie sometimes go out of control and becomes somewhat weird but I did not mind that.This film is about a racist cop who does not approve of his new neighbors and their interracial marriage. He does what he can to make their lives miserable and then some....What made this thriller so good is the presence of Samuel L. Jackson. He practically carried this movie with his left hand. He is a very talented actor and he shows it here. I wouldn't want to mess with his character. Also, Kerry Washington and Patrick Wilson were pretty good as the couple.Overall, this is a tense thriller with some over-the-top moments. It is better than most thrillers out there today. I rate this film 8/10.
James Hitchcock For years, Hollywood has tended to shy away from the sensitive subject of racially mixed marriages, but in recent years there have been signs that the taboo has been weakening. "Mirrors", for example, featured a racially mixed couple, and "Lakeview Terrace", another film from 2008, is an "issue" movie centred upon that very theme. (In both films the husband is white and the wife black; Hollywood still seems reluctant to make films dealing with the opposite situation, which is in fact statistically more common in real life).The film takes its title from a racially mixed middle-class neighbourhood in Los Angeles. The central characters are a young interracial couple, Chris and Lisa Mattson, and their next-door neighbour Abel Turner, a black officer with the LAPD, with whom they have a tense, uneasy relationship which soon degenerates into open hostility.The film starts off as an examination of two conflicting lifestyles. Abel, a widowed father of two young children, is considerably older than the Mattsons and is more politically and socially conservative; he is, for example, sceptical about global warming and keen to defend the police against allegations of brutality. He is a strict father, something shown by the way in which he constant corrects his children whenever they make a grammatical error. Chris and Lisa, by contrast, are more cosmopolitan and liberal; it is ironic that Chris, the young white professional, is a fan of hip hop music, generally regarded as the music of working-class urban blacks.Abel is sometimes described as a racist, but his is a specialised form of racism. He is not prejudiced against white people per se; he is happy to live in a racially mixed area, and would have no objection to living next door to an all-white couple, especially if they shared his social attitudes. He does, however, object to mixed marriages, and this is one of the reasons why he dislikes Chris and Lisa. This attitude may derive from an incident in his past. He was widowed when his wife was killed in a road accident alongside her white boss, with whom he believes (possibly incorrectly) she was having an affair.In the second half of the film it turns into an example of what I have come to regard as the "…… from Hell" movie. The basic premise of such films is that the life of the protagonist is turned upside-down by the arrival of a stranger who initially seems friendly but who quickly turns out to be dangerous. (This sub-genre of the thriller enjoyed great popularity in the late eighties and early nineties following the success of "Fatal Attraction", or "One Night Stand from Hell"). In this case it is Abel who is the villain and Chris and Lisa his victims; they may have to some extend provoked him, but his behaviour degenerates from the merely unneighbourly to the criminal to the murderous.I have given Lakeview Terrace a relatively high mark because of the original way in which its ideas are developed in the first part of the film and because of the quality of the acting, especially from Samuel L. Jackson as Abel, or at least the Abel of the early scenes. He is portrayed as a proud man, one with a short temper, but a loving if strict father, doing his best to get his kids off to a good start in life, and Jackson is able to bring out all these facets of his character, as well as hinting at the possible latent violence underlying the surface.Nevertheless it was in my view unfortunate that the scriptwriters and director Neil LaBute allowed the film to turn into a "….from Hell" movie, because the first half is actually much more interesting. Abel might end up as the neighbour from Hell, but at first he himself has several legitimate causes of complaint about the behaviour of the Mattsons. (They have been making love in their outdoor swimming-pool, in full view of Abel's children, and Chris has been flicking cigarette butts over his fence). By slavishly following the conventions of the conventional suspense thriller, the film loses the opportunity to examined the little-explored phenomenon of black conservatism and the way in which it conflicts with the cosmopolitan liberalism of many- both black and white- in the younger generation. It would appear that in Hollywood it is still OK to make a black man the villain, provided that he is sufficiently reactionary to offend against the canons of political correctness. A more conciliatory or nuanced ending might have made for a more interesting film. 7/10