Kojak: The Price of Justice (TV Movie 1987) Poster

(1987 TV Movie)

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a tangled web of false trails, jealousies and murderous scheming
petershelleyau2 May 2004
Warning: Spoilers
This made for TV movie based on the defunct Kojak TV series has New York Inspector Theo Kojak investigate a double infanticide, the murder of the two sons of Kitty Keeler, who is the wife of barman George Keeler.

Kitty is assumed to be guilty from the start because she does not behave the way a grieving mother is expected to, and her preferred dress of pastels supposedly suggests a duplicitous nature. The investigation is by-the-numbers, with the inevitable car chase, one subjective camera shot, and blood spattered over a photograph to show a gun suicide. But thankfully we are always drawn back to the innocence or guilt of Kitty, though any notion of a romance between Kojak and Kitty is dismissed by his sense of irony. Terry Savalas' bald head and full lips hints at a sensuality that his stiff acting negates.

The treatment presents Kitty as having a family with an older man, a sophisticated ambitious woman trapped in her environment, with the idea of her being a "working girl" associated with her described "generosity". This is also one of the rare times when an on-duty police officer accepts an offer of alcohol. The ambiguous ending is also more satisfying than us being given the definitive cop-show conclusion.

Everything leads to Kitty's long awaited police statement, a 5 minute monologue in close-up that director Alan Metzger violates with flashbacks and sound effects. However as Kitty, Kate Nelligan still emerges triumphant. In spite of the inconsistency of the writing of her role, she makes Kitty funny and passionate, also doing wonders with a street scene where she delivers a memory.
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5/10
Inconceivable
bkoganbing17 November 2018
Newly Minted Inspector Theo Kojak is called away from a most formal dinner tux and all to a frightening crime scene, the murder of two pre-school brothers. A crime still hard to conceive yet evidence points to mother Kate Nelligan.

A lot has been left vague in this Kojak film, The Price Of Justice. I could never understand the glamorous Nelligan marrying working stiff and bar owner Pat Hingle. He certainly loves her though considering what he does.

At the crime scene a black book is discovered and Nelligan has a lot of important and powerful friends she can call on. Including some at that most formal affair that Kojak was attending.

Telly Savalas's motive is left purposely vague in his method of investigation. But Kojak fans know that ultimately the truth is what matters most to our follicly challenged crime fighter.

Not one of the better Kojak films, but a must for fans of the series and character.
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4/10
Kojak in name only
landersreach-7298927 October 2021
Those that loved the original Kojak TV series will only enjoy this as it gives a chance to see the great Telly Savalas in action once more. The story isn't bad, although it has a lot of over dramatic 1980s style revelations and false flashbacks, which are always irritating.

The problem is that Theo Kojak, despite being played by Telly Savalas, isn't Theo Kojak. All the confident, cool and classy Kojak of the 70s is gone and we are left with an ageing cop just doing it for the money. There's no familiar "who loves ya baby?" catchphrases or lolly pops.

It would have been far better if the main character had a different name and was based in a different city. But then, they couldn't milk the Kojak money tree ...
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