Movie · 2001 · Action, Crime, Drama · 2h 2m · R · English
Curator score: 7.9/10 (1M ratings)
The only thing more dangerous than the line being crossed, is the cop who will cross it.
Overview
On his first day on the job as a narcotics officer, a rookie cop works with a rogue detective who isn't what he appears.
Ratings
Curator score: 7.9/10
IMDb: 7.8/10
Letterboxd: 4.04/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 74%
Metacritic: 71
TMDB: 7.5/10
Director
Antoine Fuqua
Production
WV Films II, Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment, Warner Bros. Pictures, Outlaw Productions
Cast
Denzel Washington, Ethan Hawke, Scott Glenn, Tom Berenger, Harris Yulin, Raymond J. Barry, Cliff Curtis, Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Macy Gray, Charlotte Ayanna, Eva Mendes, Nick Chinlund, Jaime Gomez, Raymond Cruz, Noel Gugliemi, Samantha Esteban, Richard Browner, Ronald Ellis, William English
Curator Review
Verdict
A hard-edged, propulsive corruption thriller anchored by a towering Denzel Washington performance and a tense rookie-vs-veteran dynamic. It’s stylish, morally ugly, and relentlessly watchable, even when it leans into familiar cop-movie beats.
Best for
fans of intense crime dramas
viewers who like morally compromised antiheroes
people who enjoy performance-driven thrillers
audiences looking for a gritty Los Angeles underworld story
Skip if
you want a clean-cut good-cop/bad-cop story
you’re sensitive to violence, drug use, or cynical subject matter
you prefer subtle, low-key crime films
you dislike movies where style and star power dominate the realism
Overview
Training Day is a pressure-cooker crime thriller that thrives on contradiction: it’s flashy but grim, entertaining but deeply sour. The film’s biggest asset is Denzel Washington, who turns a corrupt detective into someone magnetic, volatile, and impossible to look away from. Ethan Hawke gives the movie its nervous center, and the mismatch between the two performances is exactly what makes the tension work.
Worth noting
What lingers most is the sense of a city operating by its own brutal rules, where every conversation feels like a test and every favor comes with a trap attached. The movie is less interested in procedural detail than in power, manipulation, and the way institutional rot spreads through a day that keeps getting worse.
Bottom line
It’s not subtle, and it doesn’t need to be. The film knows it has a star turn for the ages and builds almost everything around that engine. If you want a sleek, nasty, highly rewatchable crime thriller, this is one of the defining examples of the form.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Parker (4.5★) · 6679 likes
From the Trivia section of imdb:
"The quote "King Kong aint got shit on me" is a reference to 1930s King Kong"
Fascinating.
Holli (4★) · 6375 likes
ethan hawke and the terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day
adambolt (4★) · 6300 likes
my first day at walmart was like this
Ethan Colburn (4★) · 3292 likes
This is Denzel at his best, he’s simultaneously charming and frightening. I watched this movie not knowing he would be the villain and not knowing if I was supposed to approve of the things he was doing, which I think made it better because I felt the same betrayal Ethan Hawke’s character did. His character is slightly more understated, yet he’s always one of my favorite actors. He focuses on realism over dramatics and knows when to lean back and let another actor have their moment.
This definitely the number one first day on the job movie.