Later work of Sidney Lumet

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Lumet wrote the screenplay for Q&A (1990), adapting Edwin Torres’s novel about a young assistant D.A. (Timothy Hutton) who refuses to soft-pedal his investigation of a respected police detective (Nick Nolte) accused of corruption. Lumet’s erratic track record was extended with A Stranger Among Us (1992), in which Melanie Griffith was miscast as an undercover police officer who penetrates the Hasidic community of Brooklyn. Also forgettable was Guilty as Sin (1993), with Don Johnson as an accused murderer and Rebecca De Mornay as his guileless attorney.

Night Falls on Manhattan (1996; script by Lumet), however, was an effective thriller that delved into police corruption in New York City. Andy Garcia gave a strong performance as the gung ho assistant district attorney who learns that his detective father (Ian Holm) may be corrupt; the top-notch cast also featured Richard Dreyfuss, Lena Olin, Ron Leibman, and James Gandolfini. Critical Care (1997) was a semisatirical look at the modern world of hospitals, with James Spader starring as a young doctor who discovers systemic abuses while treating his patients. As with most of Lumet’s productions, the film offered a remarkable cast; it included Albert Brooks, Helen Mirren, Kyra Sedgwick, Philip Bosco, and Wallace Shawn.

In 1999 Lumet directed Sharon Stone in a little-seen remake of John Cassavetes’s Gloria (1980). In 2001–02 he returned to television, directing episodes of 100 Centre Street, a legal drama. He then helmed the TV movie Strip Search (2004), which examines the loss of civil liberties in the pursuit of national security. He returned to the big screen with Find Me Guilty (2006), an organized-crime drama starring Vin Diesel, Ron Silver, and Peter Dinklage. In 2007 Lumet directed his final film, the suspenseful Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead. The acclaimed drama starred Philip Seymour Hoffman as a financially strapped manager who talks his brother (Ethan Hawke) into helping him rob their parents’ jewelry store—a caper that does not turn out well.

Lumet’s memoir, Making Movies, was published in 1995. In 2005 he was given an Academy Award for lifetime achievement.

Michael Barson