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* ''Film/MurderAtYellowstoneCity'': After arresting Cicero, Deputy O'Sullivan [[PistolWhipping pistol whips]] him once he is in a cell and then [[KickThemWhileTheyAreDown kicks him repeatedly while he is one the floor]].

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* In ''Film/AClockworkOrange'', the cops beat up Alex to the point where he's a quivering, bloody mess in a corner and offer to hold him down to let his ''parole officer'' take a few swings at him. After he gets freed, he gets assaulted by hobos, then bumps into his old gang members Georgie and Dim, who have been hired as cops. They're happy to "get paid to beat people up", they haven't forgotten when he violently kept them in line in his gang, and they [[TheDogBitesBack take revenge on him]] by holding his head underwater in a trough while beating him with their batons.

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* In ''Film/AClockworkOrange'', ''Film/AClockworkOrange'':
** While Alex is in custody for murder,
the cops beat up Alex to the point where he's a quivering, pummel him bloody mess in a corner and offer to hold him down to let his ''parole officer'' take a few swings at him. After he gets freed, he gets assaulted by hobos, then bumps into him.
** Alex discovers to
his old gang members horror that Georgie and Dim, members of his former gang, became cops while he was away. They proudly proclaim, "A job for two who have been hired as cops. They're are now of job age! The police!" Having delighted in ultraviolence in their youth, they're more than happy to "get get paid to beat people up", they haven't forgotten when he violently kept them in line in his gang, and they [[TheDogBitesBack take revenge on him]] by for it. Still holding a grudge against Alex for his tyrannical rule of the gang, they drag him into the woods and hold his head underwater in a trough while beating him with their batons.batons [[TheDogBitesBack as further revenge]].
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* An early example can be found in the 1941 FilmNoir ''Film/IWakeUpScreaming'' and its 1953 {{remake}} ''Vicki''. A detective browbeats his lieutenant into giving him the murder case of a beautiful model. He does everything in his power to pin the killing on her publicist: beating him, breaking into his apartment, and planting evidence. [[spoiler:In truth, he's known from the beginning that another man killed her. He doesn't care, though.]]

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* An early example can be found in ''Film/AcrossTheUniverse2007'': The National Guardsmen during the 1941 FilmNoir ''Film/IWakeUpScreaming'' Detroit Riots shoot unarmed Black people simply for looting. NYPD officers later beat up peaceful protesters, and its 1953 {{remake}} ''Vicki''. A detective browbeats his lieutenant into giving him the murder case of a beautiful model. He does everything in his power to pin the killing on her publicist: beating him, breaking into his apartment, and planting evidence. [[spoiler:In truth, Jude when he's known trying to help Lucy.
* ''Film/BillyClub2013'': The police who arrest Bobby in the middle of the movie like to administer beatings to their prisoners, as seen with the one who manhandled Bobby in his own cell. Bobby is seen cowering in the corner
from watching the beginning beating, and is left in his cell with the guy after his beating. Plus, when Bobby gets out, we see bruises all over his sides and back, which he says the cops gave him.
* "Use of unnecessary violence in the apprehension of Film/TheBluesBrothers has been approved."
* ''Film/BornOnTheFourthOfJuly'': In every protest scene, the police attack the protesters with batons flying even if they're completely peaceful, and the Kent State incident (where four were shot) gets mentioned too.
* In ''Film/BoyzNTheHood'', Officer Coffey is a black policeman [[BoomerangBigot who is racist towards other blacks]] because he thinks they're all criminals. When he and his partner question Tre and Ricky, Coffey shoves a gun in Tre's face to see him scared for his life and explains
that another man killed her. He doesn't care, though.]]he signed up specifically to rough up those he hates.
* ''Film/BridgeOfSpies'' features standard beatdowns from Soviet and East German security forces. Meanwhile, American police aren't too excited about helping James Donovan after his defense of Soviet spy Rudolf Abel, leaving him to the wolves of America's populace.
* ''Film/TheCatInTheHat'' does a comedic take on this. While distracting Conrad and Sally's mom, the Things dress up as police officers and give her a ticket. Thing One accidentally eats the ticket, prompting Thing Two to give him the Heimlich Maneuver. Thing One has this to say, "Police brutality! Illegal chokehold!"
* ''Film/{{Changeling}}'' has this. A mother loses her son and asks the police to get him back. They come back with the ''wrong kid'' and have her sent to the loonie bin to keep their credibility. [[FreakierThanFiction It was a true story.]]
* In ''Film/AClockworkOrange'', the cops beat up Alex to the point where he's a quivering, bloody mess in a corner and offer to hold him down to let his ''parole officer'' take a few swings at him. After he gets freed, he gets assaulted by hobos, then bumps into his old gang members Georgie and Dim, who have been hired as cops. They're happy to "get paid to beat people up", they haven't forgotten when he violently kept them in line in his gang, and they [[TheDogBitesBack take revenge on him]] by holding his head underwater in a trough while beating him with their batons.



* ''Film/TheCordon'': Serbian riot police brutally cracks down anti-[[UsefulNotes/SlobodanMilosevic Milosevic]] protests in 1997. The film tries to humanize the riot policemen, showing that most of them are merely PunchClockVillains, a couple of them are seriously questioning what they do, and finally, there are a few who actually like what they do.



* ''Film/DarkAngelTheAscent'': Two of Veronica's victims were a couple racist white cops who harassed and then beat a black man for no reason except he was there. It later turns out the pair both had some long records of complaints for excessive force. The police officer guarding the mayor who later shoots Veronica is another example, as he does this after ordering her to stop while flying, even though she didn't have a weapon or pose any visible threat.



* ''Film/LaHaine'' shows a particularly brutal vicious circle relationship between the Paris police and a group of teenage thugs from the local banlieues. The police raid the deprived banlieues, the people who live there fight back, which means the police crack down harder on the area, which means the people start rioting... [[spoiler:It eventually culminates in the police [[IJustShotMarvinInTheFace shooting an unarmed teenage boy by accident]], and one officer and the boy's best friend [[MexicanStandoff holding guns to each other's heads]]. End of film.]]
** [[spoiler:With a single gunshot, just after the screen goes black, as well.]]

to:

* ''Film/LaHaine'' shows a particularly brutal vicious circle relationship between In ''Film/DenOfThieves'', O'Brien and the Paris police and a group Major Crimes Squad have no issues with beating information out of teenage thugs from the local banlieues. The police a suspect.
* In ''Film/{{Detroit}}'', cops
raid the deprived banlieues, Algiers Motel during the people 1967 riot for the source of shots fired. By the end of the night, three black teens would be dead.
* The first ''Film/DirtyHarry'' movie has Harry roughing up the Scorpio Killer while in custody to learn where he had hidden a kidnapped girl, [[WhatTheHellHero and getting called out on it]]. After Scorpio gets let out of custody because of it and other red tape issues, [[PoliceBrutalityGambit the killer pays a guy to beat the crap out of him so he can blame the beating on Harry, whose only defense is that it couldn't have been him, 'cause if he was the one
who live there fight back, which means beat him, the police crack down harder on the area, which means the people start rioting... [[spoiler:It eventually culminates in the police [[IJustShotMarvinInTheFace shooting an unarmed teenage boy by accident]], and one officer and the boy's best friend [[MexicanStandoff holding guns to each other's heads]]. End of film.guy would look a lot worse.]]
** [[spoiler:With a single gunshot, just after Subsequent films continue the screen goes black, trend, naturally.
-->'''Briggs''': I've got nothing personal against you, Callahan, but we can't have the public crying 'police brutality!' every time you go out on the street.
* In ''Film/ElectraGlideInBlue'', this is one of Detective Poole's favorite tactics. When the members of a hippie commune won't tell him where a certain drug dealer is, Poole punches random people until someone starts talking.
* ''Film/FaceOff'':
** The Erewhon prison guards use far more force than is necessary, including electroshock treatment on prisoners
as well.]]punishment, which the head guard at least clearly enjoys.
** Castor, disguised as Archer, leads FBI agents in opening fire on Dietrich's penthouse with no attempt to announce themselves or arrest them. Legally, this is attempted murder, and Director Lazarro is outraged by this afterward, calling it "Gestapo tactics".



* ''Film/LakeviewTerrace'' shows a newlywed couple being terrorized by a {{corrupt cop}} neighbor, who is played by Creator/SamuelLJackson, someone you don't want to mess with. His only problem with them seems to be their [[MalignedMixedMarriage mixed-race relationship]]... although it's also possible that that's just an excuse.
* In ''Film/AClockworkOrange'', the cops beat up Alex to the point where he's a quivering, bloody mess in a corner and offer to hold him down to let his ''parole officer'' take a few swings at him. After he gets freed, he gets assaulted by hobos, then bumps into his old gang members Georgie and Dim, who have been hired as cops. They're happy to "get paid to beat people up", they haven't forgotten when he violently kept them in line in his gang, and they [[TheDogBitesBack take revenge on him]] by holding his head underwater in a trough while beating him with their batons.
* Creator/JohnWayne's character in ''Film/McQ'' (1974) is implied to have beaten up suspects in the past. One occasion has a radical giving him lip in a corridor, whereupon Wayne stamps on his foot. When another cop asks what happened, John Wayne replies, "He stubbed his foot on a chair." (The corridor is empty of chairs.)
* The ''Film/VForVendetta'' film has the Fingermen, who are the Norsefire party's SecretPolice. They are allowed to pretty much do anything, though as order in England breaks down, people put up with them less and less. This culminates in a Fingerman shooting an ''unarmed little girl'' who was spray-painting a V symbol. A lot of people -- very ''mean''-looking people -- then come out of their houses and kill the guy despite his gun and badge.
** Of specific note is that V only meets Evey because he has to intervene to save her from a police gang rape.
--> '''Fingerman:''' ...we exercise our own judicial discretion.
--> '''Another Fingerman:''' And you get to swallow it.
* ''Film/TheCatInTheHat'' does a comedic take on this. While distracting Conrad and Sally's mom, the Things dress up as police officers and give her a ticket. Thing One accidentally eats the ticket, prompting Thing Two to give him the Heimlich Maneuver. Thing One has this to say, "Police brutality! Illegal chokehold!"
* ''Film/{{Changeling}}'' has this. A mother loses her son and asks the police to get him back. They come back with the ''wrong kid'' and have her sent to the loonie bin to keep their credibility. [[FreakierThanFiction It was a true story.]]
* ''Film/TheImaginariumOfDoctorParnassus'' has the song ''"We Love Violence (Join the Fuzz)"'' where a troupe of singing, dancing policemen extols the virtues of being able to perform violence within the law.
* In ''Film/IpMan2'', one British policeman has his buddies hold down [[spoiler:editor-in-chief Kan]] while he deals out a beating.
* ''Film/Transformers2007'' has a cop threaten to "bust [Sam] up" for looking at his gun. Because reaching for a gun won't cause people to automatically look at you.
* The first ''Film/DirtyHarry'' movie has Harry roughing up the Scorpio Killer while in custody to learn where he had hidden a kidnapped girl, [[WhatTheHellHero and getting called out on it]]. After Scorpio gets let out of custody because of it and other red tape issues, [[PoliceBrutalityGambit the killer pays a guy to beat the crap out of him so he can blame the beating on Harry, whose only defense is that it couldn't have been him, 'cause if he was the one who beat him, the guy would look a lot worse.]]
** Subsequent films continue the trend, naturally.
-->'''Briggs''': I've got nothing personal against you, Callahan, but we can't have the public crying 'police brutality!' every time you go out on the street.



* In 2010 film ''Film/TheTraveler'', the Drifter was assaulted extremely badly to the point of coma by Detective Black and the rest of the police officers who were at the interrogation scene. This sets off the entire vengeance plot of the film.
* In ''Film/RedState'', the local Sheriff accidentally shoots one of the hostages, who had escaped with a rifle in hand. The ATF then panics, declares the entire Cooper family to be domestic terrorists, and orders everyone killed. [[spoiler:The federal agents wind up murdering the remaining hostage and several unarmed people over the rest of the movie.]]
* The action-comedy ''Film/NationalSecurity'' kicks off with a white cop allegedly beating an innocent black man. In reality, the cop was about to arrest the guy for attempted Grand Theft Auto and resisting arrest (as well as insulting him). Then a "big-ass bumblebee" showed up, and the suspect, who is allergic to bees, asked the cop to get rid of it. Which the cop did... with his nightstick. A tourist films the whole thing from far away and from an angle that hides the bumblebee. The shot of the suspect on TV suggests he was brutally beaten up, due to his face being swollen. He shows up the next day completely fine, explaining that it was an allergic reaction to the bumblebee. He still maintains that he was assaulted, though (the cop does admit in court that he missed the bumblebee a few times and hit the guy). The cop loses his job and is jailed for 6 months (which is done more for PR than anything). When he comes out, the only job he can get is in security.
* In ''Film/MenaceIISociety'', Caine and Sharif are beaten by cops and left in a rival gang's neighbourhood.
* This is present quite a bit in ''Film/LAConfidential''. The most noteworthy example is probably the Bloody Christmas scandal, where a bunch of alcohol-imbibed officers rough up a group of unarmed prisoners as retaliation against the beating up of a pair of cops earlier that evening.
* The setting of ''Film/PrideAndGlory'' begins with a group of corrupt cops deciding to get rid of Angel Tezo so that they can do business with another dealer. The plan starts to go downhill when Tezo escapes from a botched hit, forcing the group into a frantic search to find and kill him before anyone else in the NYPD discovers his connections with them. The corrupt cops eventually catch Tezo and have him tortured before being killed. Unfortunately, the last moments of the brutality were witnessed by Ray, another officer on the task-force which was assigned to investigate the incident, which is later followed by a private interview between a reporter and Sandy, another corrupt officer who soon commits suicide after exposing the group that he used to work with.

to:

* In 2010 film ''Film/TheTraveler'', ''Film/FirstBlood'' has its plot kick off when small-town police manhandle Franchise/{{Rambo}}, a ShellShockedVeteran, in custody, when all they were supposed to do was clean him up for his court appearance. Their attempt to forcefully shave him presses his TraumaButton and he escapes, beginning the Drifter was assaulted extremely badly to manhunt that forms the point of coma by Detective Black and story. One cop spends the rest of his screentime trying to ''[[RabidCop literally]]'' hunt Rambo down with a hunting rifle; he starts with trying to [[StopOrIWillShoot shoot the unarmed man on a crowded street]] and progresses to sniping him from a helicopter.
* ''Film/UnFlic'' has two examples, one explicit and one implied:
** Commissioner Coleman has to deal with a team of pickpockets who claim not to speak French. He slaps one of them in the face, and his language skills improve.
** Coleman and his team arrest one of Simon's gang, who denies everything. They then lower the shutters on the windows in Coleman's office, and shine a bright light on the suspect. Cut to Coleman phoning Simon: "Do you know Louis Costa?" "No." "Well, he knows you."
* ''Film/ForbiddenLoveTheUnashamedStoriesOfLesbianLives'': The police used to target lesbians with harassment, beatings and even rape.
* Freebie from ''Film/FreebieAndTheBean'' jumps at the slightest excuse to beat people up. He punches one man in the face as a greeting.
* ''Film/GettingStraight'': During a protest, police beat protestors with batons and spray them with fire hoses, knocking them down a flight of concrete stairs.
* ''Film/TheGirlFromMonday'': [[spoiler:William]] is shot dead by
the police officers who were at for running away from them.
* ''Film/Glass2019'': Cops in
the interrogation scene. This sets off the entire vengeance plot employ of the film.
AncientConspiracy murder [[spoiler:David and Kevin]] under a guise of taking down dangerous threats (when both were actually no longer threats when this happened).
* In ''Film/RedState'', ''Film/GoodbyeLenin'' has an important scene in which an anti-government demonstration the main character takes part in is violently suppressed by the police, leading to his mother having a heart attack (his pleas for his mother are only rewarded by being herded into the back of a truck, held down, and beaten up). Justified as the setting is East Germany when it was still under an oppressive totalitarian communist regime.
* ''Film/LaHaine'' shows a particularly brutal vicious circle relationship between the Paris police and a group of teenage thugs from
the local Sheriff accidentally shoots one of banlieues. The police raid the hostages, deprived banlieues, the people who had escaped with a rifle in hand. The ATF then panics, declares live there fight back, which means the entire Cooper family to be domestic terrorists, and orders everyone killed. [[spoiler:The federal agents wind up murdering police crack down harder on the remaining hostage and several area, which means the people start rioting... [[spoiler:It eventually culminates in the police [[IJustShotMarvinInTheFace shooting an unarmed people over teenage boy by accident]], and one officer and the rest boy's best friend [[MexicanStandoff holding guns to each other's heads]]. End of the movie.film.]]
* The action-comedy ''Film/NationalSecurity'' kicks off with ** [[spoiler:With a white cop allegedly beating an innocent black man. In reality, single gunshot, just after the cop was about to arrest screen goes black, as well.]]
* ''Film/HowToBlowUpAPipeline'':
** Security guards for
the guy for attempted Grand Theft Auto and resisting arrest (as well pipeline shoot at Logan as insulting him). Then a "big-ass bumblebee" showed up, and the suspect, who is allergic to bees, asked the cop to get rid of it. Which the cop did... with his nightstick. A tourist films the whole thing from far away and from an angle that hides the bumblebee. The shot of the suspect on TV suggests he was brutally beaten up, due to his face being swollen. He shows up the next day completely fine, explaining that it was an allergic reaction to the bumblebee. He still maintains that he was assaulted, though (the cop does admit in court that he missed the bumblebee a few times and hit the guy). The cop loses his job and is jailed for 6 months (which is done more for PR than anything). When he comes out, the only job he can get is in security.
* In ''Film/MenaceIISociety'', Caine and Sharif are beaten by cops and left in a rival gang's neighbourhood.
* This is present quite a bit in ''Film/LAConfidential''. The most noteworthy example is probably the Bloody Christmas scandal, where a bunch of alcohol-imbibed officers rough up a group of unarmed prisoners as retaliation against the beating up of a pair of cops earlier that evening.
* The setting of ''Film/PrideAndGlory'' begins with a group of corrupt cops deciding to get rid of Angel Tezo so that they can do business with another dealer. The plan starts to go downhill when Tezo escapes from a botched hit, forcing the group into a frantic search to find and kill him before anyone else in the NYPD discovers his connections with them. The corrupt cops eventually catch Tezo and have him tortured before being killed. Unfortunately, the last moments of the brutality were witnessed by Ray, another officer on the task-force which was assigned to investigate the incident,
runs away, which is later followed by a private interview between a reporter illegal, though he'd have to get caught to actually get them in trouble for it.
** Xochitl
and Sandy, another corrupt officer who soon commits suicide after exposing Theo get brutalized by cops as they attempt to surrender peacefully.
* ''Film/TheImaginariumOfDoctorParnassus'' has
the group that he used song ''"We Love Violence (Join the Fuzz)"'' where a troupe of singing, dancing policemen extols the virtues of being able to work with.perform violence within the law.



* In ''Film/BoyzNTheHood'', Officer Coffey is a black policeman [[BoomerangBigot who is racist towards other blacks]] because he thinks they're all criminals. When he and his partner question Tre and Ricky, Coffey shoves a gun in Tre's face to see him scared for his life and explains that he signed up specifically to rough up those he hates.

to:

* In ''Film/BoyzNTheHood'', Officer Coffey is a black ''Film/IpMan2'', one British policeman [[BoomerangBigot who is racist towards other blacks]] because has his buddies hold down [[spoiler:editor-in-chief Kan]] while he thinks they're all criminals. When he deals out a beating.
* An early example can be found in the 1941 FilmNoir ''Film/IWakeUpScreaming''
and its 1953 {{remake}} ''Vicki''. A detective browbeats his partner question Tre lieutenant into giving him the murder case of a beautiful model. He does everything in his power to pin the killing on her publicist: beating him, breaking into his apartment, and Ricky, Coffey shoves a gun in Tre's face to see him scared for his life and explains planting evidence. [[spoiler:In truth, he's known from the beginning that he signed up specifically to rough up those he hates.another man killed her. He doesn't care, though.]]



* ''Film/{{Surveillance}}'' features a pair of police officers who enjoy shooting out the tires of passing motorists and then terrorizing said motorists, claiming that speeding led to the tire blowing out.
* ''Film/TalesFromTheHood'': Billy, Newton, and Strom conspire to murder a black politician who was exposing their drug-dealing business. Their victim subsequently rises from the grave to get revenge.
* The LAPD are called out for this in ''Film/SWAT2003'' when a fleeing African-American suspect is apprehended. The accuser knows full well that the officers are none other than Creator/SamuelLJackson and Music/LLCoolJ, making the suggestion either TooDumbToLive or PlayedForLaughs, you pick it.
* ''Film/RoboCop1987'' uses this trope to satirize the [[RabidCop notoriously trigger-happy]] police forces of major American cities, and is an over-the-top parody of the "tough on crime" attitude in general. [=RoboCop=] has an ObstructiveCodeOfConduct that means he will NeverHurtAnInnocent, but aside from that, he's free to enforce the law using as violent means as possible as long as he technically doesn't do anything illegal. Apparently, this doesn't extend to [[DestinationDefenestration throwing a perp out a window]] or [[GroinAttack shooting an attempted rapist in the balls]].
* "Use of unnecessary violence in the apprehension of Film/TheBluesBrothers has been approved."
* ''Film/BridgeOfSpies'' features standard beatdowns from Soviet and East German security forces. Meanwhile, American police aren't too excited about helping James Donovan after his defense of Soviet spy Rudolf Abel, leaving him to the wolves of America's populace.
* In ''Film/{{Suffragette}}'', the policemen throw women to the floor and then proceed to beat them up.

to:

* ''Film/{{Surveillance}}'' features This is present quite a bit in ''Film/LAConfidential''. The most noteworthy example is probably the Bloody Christmas scandal, where a bunch of alcohol-imbibed officers rough up a group of unarmed prisoners as retaliation against the beating up of a pair of police officers who enjoy shooting out the tires of passing motorists and then terrorizing said motorists, claiming cops earlier that speeding led to the tire blowing out.
evening.
* ''Film/TalesFromTheHood'': Billy, Newton, and Strom conspire to murder ''Film/LakeviewTerrace'' shows a black politician newlywed couple being terrorized by a {{corrupt cop}} neighbor, who was exposing is played by Creator/SamuelLJackson, someone you don't want to mess with. His only problem with them seems to be their drug-dealing business. Their victim subsequently rises from the grave to get revenge.
* The LAPD are called out for this in ''Film/SWAT2003'' when a fleeing African-American suspect is apprehended. The accuser knows full well that the officers are none other than Creator/SamuelLJackson and Music/LLCoolJ, making the suggestion either TooDumbToLive or PlayedForLaughs, you pick it.
* ''Film/RoboCop1987'' uses this trope to satirize the [[RabidCop notoriously trigger-happy]] police forces of major American cities, and is an over-the-top parody of the "tough on crime" attitude in general. [=RoboCop=] has an ObstructiveCodeOfConduct that means he will NeverHurtAnInnocent, but aside from that, he's free to enforce the law using as violent means as
[[MalignedMixedMarriage mixed-race relationship]]... although it's also possible as long as he technically doesn't do anything illegal. Apparently, this doesn't extend that that's just an excuse.
* ''Film/LightSleeper'': Slimy cop [[SmugSnake Radone]] slams [[PunchClockVillain John]] into a shop window hard enough
to [[DestinationDefenestration throwing a perp out a window]] or [[GroinAttack shooting an attempted rapist in break the balls]].
* "Use of unnecessary violence in the apprehension of Film/TheBluesBrothers has been approved."
* ''Film/BridgeOfSpies'' features standard beatdowns from Soviet and East German security forces. Meanwhile, American police aren't too excited about helping James Donovan after his defense of Soviet spy Rudolf Abel, leaving him
glass to the wolves of America's populace.
* In ''Film/{{Suffragette}}'', the policemen throw women to the floor and then proceed to beat them up.
intimidate him.



* ''Film/TheyLive'': When the cops raid the homeless camp, they brutally beat people with no provocation in most cases, or use excessive force against the few who attempt to resist (including the minister, who's ''blind'').
* ''Film/ZabriskiePoint'' by Creator/MichelangeloAntonioni deals with LA's counterculture of TheSixties, and features police as trigger-happy, stupid, and racist.
* ''Film/GoodbyeLenin'' has an important scene in which an anti-government demonstration the main character takes part in is violently suppressed by the police, leading to his mother having a heart attack (his pleas for his mother are only rewarded by being herded into the back of a truck, held down, and beaten up). Justified as the setting is East Germany when it was still under an oppressive totalitarian communist regime.
* In ''Film/WhereTheSidewalkEnds'', this the moving force of the plot. Dixon has gotten many warnings about his violent behavior towards suspects, so much so that he will be demoted if it happens again. His altercation with Ken Paine, and his subsequent death, makes him turn into a full out criminal.
* In ''Film/{{Detroit}}'', cops raid the Algiers Motel during the 1967 riot for the source of shots fired. By the end of the night, three black teens would be dead.
* In ''Film/DenOfThieves'', O'Brien and the Major Crimes Squad have no issues with beating information out of a suspect.
* ''Film/StrangeDays'': Complaints around this have heightened racial tensions in the US during the film, and in particular the plot revolves around an outspoken rapper being killed by two cops, which is inadvertently recorded, with them trying to track down the recording.
* ''Film/FirstBlood'' has its plot kick off when small-town police manhandle Franchise/{{Rambo}}, a ShellShockedVeteran, in custody, when all they were supposed to do was clean him up for his court appearance. Their attempt to forcefully shave him presses his TraumaButton and he escapes, beginning the manhunt that forms the story. One cop spends the rest of his screentime trying to ''[[RabidCop literally]]'' hunt Rambo down with a hunting rifle; he starts with trying to [[StopOrIWillShoot shoot the unarmed man on a crowded street]] and progresses to sniping him from a helicopter.

to:

* ''Film/TheyLive'': When the The corrupt vigilante cops raid [[spoiler: led by Lt. Neil Briggs]] in ''Film/MagnumForce'' enjoy pulling this. As Film/DirtyHarry says, [[ArcWords "A man's got to know his limitations."]]
* In ''Film/AManCalledSledge'', Sledge's plan relies on him being locked up in
the homeless camp, they brutally beat people with no provocation in most cases, or use excessive force against prison for the few night. However, the warden plans to hand him over to Sheriff Ripley to be held in the county jail overnight because he hasn't been convicted of anything yet. So Sledge goads Ripley by taunting over the death of his deputy till Ripley not only punches him, but [[KickThemWhileTheyAreDown kicks him several times while he is own the floor]]. The warden is horrified and--fearing Sledge might not survive a night in the jail--agrees to hold him overnight.
* ''Film/MargaritaWithAStraw'': Laila meets Khanum while at a protest over the death of a black man
who attempt NYPD officers shot which is alleged to resist (including result from this. The protest then shows examples itself as it gets unruly and the minister, who's ''blind'').
* ''Film/ZabriskiePoint'' by Creator/MichelangeloAntonioni deals with LA's counterculture of TheSixties, and features
police as trigger-happy, stupid, and racist.
* ''Film/GoodbyeLenin'' has an important scene in which an anti-government demonstration
heavy-handed. Laila mentions the main Delhi Police where she's from are also like this.
* Creator/JohnWayne's
character takes part in ''Film/McQ'' (1974) is violently suppressed by implied to have beaten up suspects in the police, leading past. One occasion has a radical giving him lip in a corridor, whereupon Wayne stamps on his foot. When another cop asks what happened, John Wayne replies, "He stubbed his foot on a chair." (The corridor is empty of chairs.)
* In ''Film/MenaceIISociety'', Caine and Sharif are beaten by cops and left in a rival gang's neighbourhood.
* The action-comedy ''Film/NationalSecurity'' kicks off with a white cop allegedly beating an innocent black man. In reality, the cop was about to arrest the guy for attempted Grand Theft Auto and resisting arrest (as well as insulting him). Then a "big-ass bumblebee" showed up, and the suspect, who is allergic to bees, asked the cop to get rid of it. Which the cop did... with his nightstick. A tourist films the whole thing from far away and from an angle that hides the bumblebee. The shot of the suspect on TV suggests he was brutally beaten up, due
to his mother having a heart attack (his pleas for his mother are only rewarded by face being herded into swollen. He shows up the back of a truck, held down, and beaten up). Justified as the setting is East Germany when next day completely fine, explaining that it was an allergic reaction to the bumblebee. He still under an oppressive totalitarian communist regime.
* In ''Film/WhereTheSidewalkEnds'', this the moving force of the plot. Dixon has gotten many warnings about his violent behavior towards suspects, so much so
maintains that he will be demoted if it happens again. His altercation with Ken Paine, and his subsequent death, makes him turn into a full out criminal.
* In ''Film/{{Detroit}}'', cops raid the Algiers Motel during the 1967 riot for the source of shots fired. By the end of the night, three black teens would be dead.
* In ''Film/DenOfThieves'', O'Brien and the Major Crimes Squad have no issues with beating information out of a suspect.
* ''Film/StrangeDays'': Complaints around this have heightened racial tensions in the US during the film, and in particular the plot revolves around an outspoken rapper being killed by two cops, which is inadvertently recorded, with them trying to track down the recording.
* ''Film/FirstBlood'' has its plot kick off when small-town police manhandle Franchise/{{Rambo}}, a ShellShockedVeteran, in custody, when all they were supposed to do
was clean him up for his assaulted, though (the cop does admit in court appearance. Their attempt to forcefully shave him presses his TraumaButton and he escapes, beginning the manhunt that forms he missed the story. One bumblebee a few times and hit the guy). The cop spends loses his job and is jailed for 6 months (which is done more for PR than anything). When he comes out, the rest of his screentime trying to ''[[RabidCop literally]]'' hunt Rambo down with a hunting rifle; only job he starts with trying to [[StopOrIWillShoot shoot the unarmed man on a crowded street]] and progresses to sniping him from a helicopter.can get is in security.



* The setting of ''Film/PrideAndGlory'' begins with a group of corrupt cops deciding to get rid of Angel Tezo so that they can do business with another dealer. The plan starts to go downhill when Tezo escapes from a botched hit, forcing the group into a frantic search to find and kill him before anyone else in the NYPD discovers his connections with them. The corrupt cops eventually catch Tezo and have him tortured before being killed. Unfortunately, the last moments of the brutality were witnessed by Ray, another officer on the task-force which was assigned to investigate the incident, which is later followed by a private interview between a reporter and Sandy, another corrupt officer who soon commits suicide after exposing the group that he used to work with.
* ''Film/QueenAndSlim'': What kicks the plot off is Queen being shot in the leg by a RabidCop for just objecting to his hassling Slim for no reason. Slim then kills him in self-defense. It turns out that the cop also had shot an unarmed black man prior to the events of the film. [[spoiler:Queen and Slim are also killed by the cops at the end when neither is posing any threat but simply don't orders.]]
* In ''Film/RedState'', the local Sheriff accidentally shoots one of the hostages, who had escaped with a rifle in hand. The ATF then panics, declares the entire Cooper family to be domestic terrorists, and orders everyone killed. [[spoiler:The federal agents wind up murdering the remaining hostage and several unarmed people over the rest of the movie.]]
* In ''Film/RiotOnSunsetStrip'', Lieutenant Lorimer gives television speeches about the importance of nonviolent law enforcement, but he eventually loses control and punches his daughter's rapists in the hospital.
* ''Film/RoboCop1987'' uses this trope to satirize the [[RabidCop notoriously trigger-happy]] police forces of major American cities, and is an over-the-top parody of the "tough on crime" attitude in general. [=RoboCop=] has an ObstructiveCodeOfConduct that means he will NeverHurtAnInnocent, but aside from that, he's free to enforce the law using as violent means as possible as long as he technically doesn't do anything illegal. Apparently, this doesn't extend to [[DestinationDefenestration throwing a perp out a window]] or [[GroinAttack shooting an attempted rapist in the balls]].
* ''Film/RPM1970'': When the police come to remove the students from the building, some of them beat unarmed protestors with batons.



* ''Film/DarkAngelTheAscent'': Two of Veronica's victims were a couple racist white cops who harassed and then beat a black man for no reason except he was there. It later turns out the pair both had some long records of complaints for excessive force. The police officer guarding the mayor who later shoots Veronica is another example, as he does this after ordering her to stop while flying, even though she didn't have a weapon or pose any visible threat.

to:

* ''Film/DarkAngelTheAscent'': Two of Veronica's victims were ''Film/TheSiege'': FBI Agent Frank backhands Samir, a couple racist white cops who harassed and then beat a black man for no reason except he was there. It later turns out the pair both had some long records of complaints for excessive force. The police officer guarding the mayor who later shoots Veronica is another example, as he does this handcuffed suspect, after ordering her to stop he insults him. Hubbard chews him out, while flying, even though she didn't have a weapon or pose any visible threat.Frank defends himself by offering to tell him what Samir's people (the Palestinians) did to his village in Lebanon (presumably during the Lebanese Civil War, when numerous massacres were committed on all sides).



* ''Film/TheGirlFromMonday'': [[spoiler:William]] is shot dead by the police for running away from them.

to:

* ''Film/TheGirlFromMonday'': [[spoiler:William]] is shot dead by ''Film/StrangeDays'': Complaints around this have heightened racial tensions in the US during the film, and in particular the plot revolves around an outspoken rapper being killed by two cops, which is inadvertently recorded, with them trying to track down the recording.
* In ''Film/TheStrawberryStatement'', Simon's right-wing rowing teammate punches him in the face, giving him a bloody lip. He spits blood on his shirt and smears it on his face so he can pretend to be a
police brutality victim in order to increase his clout. Later he experiences the real thing when cops raid the building and start kicking and beating peaceful protesters.
* In ''Film/{{Suffragette}}'', the policemen throw women to the floor and then proceed to beat them up.
* ''Film/{{Surveillance}}'' features a pair of police officers who enjoy shooting out the tires of passing motorists and then terrorizing said motorists, claiming that speeding led to the tire blowing out.
* The LAPD are called out
for running away this in ''Film/SWAT2003'' when a fleeing African-American suspect is apprehended. The accuser knows full well that the officers are none other than Creator/SamuelLJackson and Music/LLCoolJ, making the suggestion either TooDumbToLive or PlayedForLaughs, you pick it.
* ''Film/TalesFromTheHood'': Billy, Newton, and Strom conspire to murder a black politician who was exposing their drug-dealing business. Their victim subsequently rises
from them.the grave to get revenge.



* ''Film/MargaritaWithAStraw'': Laila meets Khanum while at a protest over the death of a black man who NYPD officers shot which is alleged to result from this. The protest then shows examples itself as it gets unruly and the police heavy-handed. Laila mentions the Delhi Police where she's from are also like this.

to:

* ''Film/MargaritaWithAStraw'': Laila meets Khanum while at a protest over ''Film/TheyLive'': When the death of a black man cops raid the homeless camp, they brutally beat people with no provocation in most cases, or use excessive force against the few who NYPD officers shot which is alleged attempt to result from this. The protest then shows examples itself as it gets unruly resist (including the minister, who's ''blind'').
* ''Film/Transformers2007'' has a cop threaten to "bust [Sam] up" for looking at his gun. Because reaching for a gun won't cause people to automatically look at you.
* In 2010 film ''Film/TheTraveler'', the Drifter was assaulted extremely badly to the point of coma by Detective Black
and the rest of the police heavy-handed. Laila mentions officers who were at the Delhi Police interrogation scene. This sets off the entire vengeance plot of the film.
* ''Film/TheTrialOfTheChicago7'': 99% of the police footage in this film is of them beating and arresting protestors (usually without any cause), including one scene
where she's from are they rip off their badges before assaulting them right outside a fancy diner. Fred Hampton is also like this.killed by police offscreen when he was already helpless. "Executed", Seale rightly says.



* The ''Film/VForVendetta'' film has the Fingermen, who are the Norsefire party's SecretPolice. They are allowed to pretty much do anything, though as order in England breaks down, people put up with them less and less. This culminates in a Fingerman shooting an ''unarmed little girl'' who was spray-painting a V symbol. A lot of people -- very ''mean''-looking people -- then come out of their houses and kill the guy despite his gun and badge.
** Of specific note is that V only meets Evey because he has to intervene to save her from a police gang rape.
--> '''Fingerman:''' ...we exercise our own judicial discretion.
--> '''Another Fingerman:''' And you get to swallow it.
* In ''Film/WhereTheSidewalkEnds'', this the moving force of the plot. Dixon has gotten many warnings about his violent behavior towards suspects, so much so that he will be demoted if it happens again. His altercation with Ken Paine, and his subsequent death, makes him turn into a full out criminal.



* ''Film/TheTrialOfTheChicago7'': 99% of the police footage in this film is of them beating and arresting protestors (usually without any cause), including one scene where they rip off their badges before assaulting them right outside a fancy diner. Fred Hampton is also killed by police offscreen when he was already helpless. "Executed", Seale rightly says.
* ''Film/FaceOff'':
** The Erewhon prison guards use far more force than is necessary, including electroshock treatment on prisoners as punishment, which the head guard at least clearly enjoys.
** Castor, disguised as Archer, leads FBI agents in opening fire on Dietrich's penthouse with no attempt to announce themselves or arrest them. Legally, this is attempted murder, and Director Lazarro is outraged by this afterward, calling it "Gestapo tactics".
* ''Film/Glass2019'': Cops in the employ of the AncientConspiracy murder [[spoiler:David and Kevin]] under a guise of taking down dangerous threats (when both were actually no longer threats when this happened).
* In ''Film/RiotOnSunsetStrip'', Lieutenant Lorimer gives television speeches about the importance of nonviolent law enforcement, but he eventually loses control and punches his daughter's rapists in the hospital.
* ''Film/AcrossTheUniverse2007'': The National Guardsmen during the Detroit Riots shoot unarmed Black people simply for looting. NYPD officers later beat up peaceful protesters, and Jude when he's trying to help Lucy.
* ''Film/ForbiddenLoveTheUnashamedStoriesOfLesbianLives'': The police used to target lesbians with harassment, beatings and even rape.
* ''Film/TheSiege'': FBI Agent Frank backhands Samir, a handcuffed suspect, after he insults him. Hubbard chews him out, while Frank defends himself by offering to tell him what Samir's people (the Palestinians) did to his village in Lebanon (presumably during the Lebanese Civil War, when numerous massacres were committed on all sides).
* In ''Film/ElectraGlideInBlue'', this is one of Detective Poole's favorite tactics. When the members of a hippie commune won't tell him where a certain drug dealer is, Poole punches random people until someone starts talking.
* The corrupt vigilante cops [[spoiler: led by Lt. Neil Briggs]] in ''Film/MagnumForce'' enjoy pulling this. As Film/DirtyHarry says, [[ArcWords "A man's got to know his limitations."]]
* ''Film/BornOnTheFourthOfJuly'': In every protest scene, the police attack the protesters with batons flying even if they're completely peaceful, and the Kent State incident (where four were shot) gets mentioned too.
* Freebie from ''Film/FreebieAndTheBean'' jumps at the slightest excuse to beat people up. He punches one man in the face as a greeting.
* ''Film/LightSleeper'': Slimy cop [[SmugSnake Radone]] slams [[PunchClockVillain John]] into a shop window hard enough to break the glass to intimidate him.
* In ''Film/TheStrawberryStatement'', Simon's right-wing rowing teammate punches him in the face, giving him a bloody lip. He spits blood on his shirt and smears it on his face so he can pretend to be a police brutality victim in order to increase his clout. Later he experiences the real thing when cops raid the building and start kicking and beating peaceful protesters.
* ''Film/GettingStraight'': During a protest, police beat protestors with batons and spray them with fire hoses, knocking them down a flight of concrete stairs.
* ''Film/TheCordon'': Serbian riot police brutally cracks down anti-[[UsefulNotes/SlobodanMilosevic Milosevic]] protests in 1997. The film tries to humanize the riot policemen, showing that most of them are merely PunchClockVillains, a couple of them are seriously questioning what they do, and finally, there are a few who actually like what they do.
* ''Film/RPM1970'': When the police come to remove the students from the building, some of them beat unarmed protestors with batons.
* In ''Film/AManCalledSledge'', Sledge's plan relies on him being locked up in the prison for the night. However, the warden plans to hand him over to Sheriff Ripley to be held in the county jail overnight because he hasn't been convicted of anything yet. So Sledge goads Ripley by taunting over the death of his deputy till Ripley not only punches him, but [[KickThemWhileTheyAreDown kicks him several times while he is own the floor]]. The warden is horrified and--fearing Sledge might not survive a night in the jail--agrees to hold him overnight.
* ''Film/BillyClub2013'': The police who arrest Bobby in the middle of the movie like to administer beatings to their prisoners, as seen with the one who manhandled Bobby in his own cell. Bobby is seen cowering in the corner from watching the beating, and is left in his cell with the guy after his beating. Plus, when Bobby gets out, we see bruises all over his sides and back, which he says the cops gave him.
* ''Film/HowToBlowUpAPipeline'':
** Security guards for the pipeline shoot at Logan as he runs away, which is illegal, though he'd have to get caught to actually get them in trouble for it.
** Xochitl and Theo get brutalized by cops as they attempt to surrender peacefully.
* ''Film/QueenAndSlim'': What kicks the plot off is Queen being shot in the leg by a RabidCop for just objecting to his hassling Slim for no reason. Slim then kills him in self-defense. It turns out that the cop also had shot an unarmed black man prior to the events of the film. [[spoiler:Queen and Slim are also killed by the cops at the end when neither is posing any threat but simply don't orders.]]
* ''UnFlic'' has two examples, one explicit and one implied:
** Commissioner Coleman has to deal with a team of pickpockets who claim not to speak French. He slaps one of them in the face, and his language skills improve.
** Coleman and his team arrest one of Simon's gang, who denies everything. They then lower the shutters on the windows in Coleman's office, and shine a bright light on the suspect. Cut to Coleman phoning Simon: "Do you know Louis Costa?" "No." "Well, he knows you."

to:

* ''Film/TheTrialOfTheChicago7'': 99% ''Film/ZabriskiePoint'' by Creator/MichelangeloAntonioni deals with LA's counterculture of the TheSixties, and features police footage in this film is of them beating as trigger-happy, stupid, and arresting protestors (usually without any cause), including one scene where they rip off their badges before assaulting them right outside a fancy diner. Fred Hampton is also killed by police offscreen when he was already helpless. "Executed", Seale rightly says.
* ''Film/FaceOff'':
** The Erewhon prison guards use far more force than is necessary, including electroshock treatment on prisoners as punishment, which the head guard at least clearly enjoys.
** Castor, disguised as Archer, leads FBI agents in opening fire on Dietrich's penthouse with no attempt to announce themselves or arrest them. Legally, this is attempted murder, and Director Lazarro is outraged by this afterward, calling it "Gestapo tactics".
* ''Film/Glass2019'': Cops in the employ of the AncientConspiracy murder [[spoiler:David and Kevin]] under a guise of taking down dangerous threats (when both were actually no longer threats when this happened).
* In ''Film/RiotOnSunsetStrip'', Lieutenant Lorimer gives television speeches about the importance of nonviolent law enforcement, but he eventually loses control and punches his daughter's rapists in the hospital.
* ''Film/AcrossTheUniverse2007'': The National Guardsmen during the Detroit Riots shoot unarmed Black people simply for looting. NYPD officers later beat up peaceful protesters, and Jude when he's trying to help Lucy.
* ''Film/ForbiddenLoveTheUnashamedStoriesOfLesbianLives'': The police used to target lesbians with harassment, beatings and even rape.
* ''Film/TheSiege'': FBI Agent Frank backhands Samir, a handcuffed suspect, after he insults him. Hubbard chews him out, while Frank defends himself by offering to tell him what Samir's people (the Palestinians) did to his village in Lebanon (presumably during the Lebanese Civil War, when numerous massacres were committed on all sides).
* In ''Film/ElectraGlideInBlue'', this is one of Detective Poole's favorite tactics. When the members of a hippie commune won't tell him where a certain drug dealer is, Poole punches random people until someone starts talking.
* The corrupt vigilante cops [[spoiler: led by Lt. Neil Briggs]] in ''Film/MagnumForce'' enjoy pulling this. As Film/DirtyHarry says, [[ArcWords "A man's got to know his limitations."]]
* ''Film/BornOnTheFourthOfJuly'': In every protest scene, the police attack the protesters with batons flying even if they're completely peaceful, and the Kent State incident (where four were shot) gets mentioned too.
* Freebie from ''Film/FreebieAndTheBean'' jumps at the slightest excuse to beat people up. He punches one man in the face as a greeting.
* ''Film/LightSleeper'': Slimy cop [[SmugSnake Radone]] slams [[PunchClockVillain John]] into a shop window hard enough to break the glass to intimidate him.
* In ''Film/TheStrawberryStatement'', Simon's right-wing rowing teammate punches him in the face, giving him a bloody lip. He spits blood on his shirt and smears it on his face so he can pretend to be a police brutality victim in order to increase his clout. Later he experiences the real thing when cops raid the building and start kicking and beating peaceful protesters.
* ''Film/GettingStraight'': During a protest, police beat protestors with batons and spray them with fire hoses, knocking them down a flight of concrete stairs.
* ''Film/TheCordon'': Serbian riot police brutally cracks down anti-[[UsefulNotes/SlobodanMilosevic Milosevic]] protests in 1997. The film tries to humanize the riot policemen, showing that most of them are merely PunchClockVillains, a couple of them are seriously questioning what they do, and finally, there are a few who actually like what they do.
* ''Film/RPM1970'': When the police come to remove the students from the building, some of them beat unarmed protestors with batons.
* In ''Film/AManCalledSledge'', Sledge's plan relies on him being locked up in the prison for the night. However, the warden plans to hand him over to Sheriff Ripley to be held in the county jail overnight because he hasn't been convicted of anything yet. So Sledge goads Ripley by taunting over the death of his deputy till Ripley not only punches him, but [[KickThemWhileTheyAreDown kicks him several times while he is own the floor]]. The warden is horrified and--fearing Sledge might not survive a night in the jail--agrees to hold him overnight.
* ''Film/BillyClub2013'': The police who arrest Bobby in the middle of the movie like to administer beatings to their prisoners, as seen with the one who manhandled Bobby in his own cell. Bobby is seen cowering in the corner from watching the beating, and is left in his cell with the guy after his beating. Plus, when Bobby gets out, we see bruises all over his sides and back, which he says the cops gave him.
* ''Film/HowToBlowUpAPipeline'':
** Security guards for the pipeline shoot at Logan as he runs away, which is illegal, though he'd have to get caught to actually get them in trouble for it.
** Xochitl and Theo get brutalized by cops as they attempt to surrender peacefully.
* ''Film/QueenAndSlim'': What kicks the plot off is Queen being shot in the leg by a RabidCop for just objecting to his hassling Slim for no reason. Slim then kills him in self-defense. It turns out that the cop also had shot an unarmed black man prior to the events of the film. [[spoiler:Queen and Slim are also killed by the cops at the end when neither is posing any threat but simply don't orders.]]
* ''UnFlic'' has two examples, one explicit and one implied:
** Commissioner Coleman has to deal with a team of pickpockets who claim not to speak French. He slaps one of them in the face, and his language skills improve.
** Coleman and his team arrest one of Simon's gang, who denies everything. They then lower the shutters on the windows in Coleman's office, and shine a bright light on the suspect. Cut to Coleman phoning Simon: "Do you know Louis Costa?" "No." "Well, he knows you."
racist.
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Added DiffLines:

* ''UnFlic'' has two examples, one explicit and one implied:
** Commissioner Coleman has to deal with a team of pickpockets who claim not to speak French. He slaps one of them in the face, and his language skills improve.
** Coleman and his team arrest one of Simon's gang, who denies everything. They then lower the shutters on the windows in Coleman's office, and shine a bright light on the suspect. Cut to Coleman phoning Simon: "Do you know Louis Costa?" "No." "Well, he knows you."
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Changed: 162

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* ''Film/HowToBlowUpAPipeline'': Xochitl gets clubbed by a cop just for protesting at them roughly dragging Theo away. To be fair, she had just triggered an explosion and suddenly started moving.

to:

* ''Film/HowToBlowUpAPipeline'': ''Film/HowToBlowUpAPipeline'':
** Security guards for the pipeline shoot at Logan as he runs away, which is illegal, though he'd have to get caught to actually get them in trouble for it.
**
Xochitl gets clubbed by a cop just for protesting at them roughly dragging and Theo away. To be fair, she had just triggered an explosion and suddenly started moving.get brutalized by cops as they attempt to surrender peacefully.
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* In ''Film/AClockworkOrange'', the cops beat up Alex to the point where he's a quivering, bloody mess in a corner and offer to hold him down to let his ''parole officer'' take a few swings at him. After he gets freed, he gets assaulted by hobos, then bumps into his old gang members Georgie and Dim, who have been hired as cops. They're happy to "get paid to beat people up", they haven't forgotten when he violently kept them in line in his gang, and they [[TheDogBitesBack take revenge on him]] by holding his head underwater in a trough and beat him with their batons doing so.

to:

* In ''Film/AClockworkOrange'', the cops beat up Alex to the point where he's a quivering, bloody mess in a corner and offer to hold him down to let his ''parole officer'' take a few swings at him. After he gets freed, he gets assaulted by hobos, then bumps into his old gang members Georgie and Dim, who have been hired as cops. They're happy to "get paid to beat people up", they haven't forgotten when he violently kept them in line in his gang, and they [[TheDogBitesBack take revenge on him]] by holding his head underwater in a trough and beat while beating him with their batons doing so.batons.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* In ''Film/AClockworkOrange'', the cops beat up Alex to the point where he's a quivering, bloody mess in a corner and offer to hold him down to let his ''parole officer'' take a few swings at him. After he gets freed, he gets assaulted by hobos, then bumps his old gang members Georgie and Dim, who have been hired as cops. They're happy to "get paid to beat people up", they haven't forgotten when he violently kept them in line in his gang, and they [[TheDogBitesBack take revenge on him]] by holding his head underwater in a trough and beat him with their batons doing so.

to:

* In ''Film/AClockworkOrange'', the cops beat up Alex to the point where he's a quivering, bloody mess in a corner and offer to hold him down to let his ''parole officer'' take a few swings at him. After he gets freed, he gets assaulted by hobos, then bumps into his old gang members Georgie and Dim, who have been hired as cops. They're happy to "get paid to beat people up", they haven't forgotten when he violently kept them in line in his gang, and they [[TheDogBitesBack take revenge on him]] by holding his head underwater in a trough and beat him with their batons doing so.
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Added DiffLines:

* ''Film/QueenAndSlim'': What kicks the plot off is Queen being shot in the leg by a RabidCop for just objecting to his hassling Slim for no reason. Slim then kills him in self-defense. It turns out that the cop also had shot an unarmed black man prior to the events of the film. [[spoiler:Queen and Slim are also killed by the cops at the end when neither is posing any threat but simply don't orders.]]
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* In ''Film/{{Convoy}}'' Spider Mike, one of the truckers forming the eponymous convoy, is brutally beaten down by the Sheriff of a little Texas town.

to:

* In ''Film/{{Convoy}}'' ''Film/{{Convoy}}'', Spider Mike, one of the truckers forming the eponymous convoy, is brutally beaten down by the Sheriff of a little Texas town.



* The first movie in the Michael Bay ''[[Film/TransformersFilmSeries Transformers]]'' series had a cop threaten to "bust [Sam] up" for looking at his gun. Because reaching for a gun won't cause people to automatically look at you.

to:

* The first movie in the Michael Bay ''[[Film/TransformersFilmSeries Transformers]]'' series had ''Film/Transformers2007'' has a cop threaten to "bust [Sam] up" for looking at his gun. Because reaching for a gun won't cause people to automatically look at you.
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* The Taiwanese police in ''Film/CrimeStory'' is depicted as such, having the protagonist, Eddie, arrested, subjected to {{Shameful Strip}}ping and beating him up to force a confession from him. Meanwhile, Eddie's boss, Hung, is free to use his mob connections to escape a beating, and is shown having a casual chat with the Taiwanese superintendent while Eddie is getting the snot beaten out of him.

to:

* The Taiwanese police in ''Film/CrimeStory'' is depicted as such, having the protagonist, Eddie, arrested, subjected to {{Shameful Strip}}ping and beating him up to force a confession from him. Meanwhile, Eddie's boss, Hung, is free to use his mob connections to escape a beating, unscathed, and is shown having a casual chat with the Taiwanese superintendent while Eddie is getting the his snot beaten out of him.out.
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* ''Film/HowToBlowUpAPipeline'': Xochitl gets clubbed by a cop just for protesting at them roughly dragging Theo away.

to:

* ''Film/HowToBlowUpAPipeline'': Xochitl gets clubbed by a cop just for protesting at them roughly dragging Theo away. To be fair, she had just triggered an explosion and suddenly started moving.

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* ''Film/{{Fallen Angel|1945}}'' has Mark Judd, who puts on special gloves to beat a confession out of a suspect.

to:

* ''Film/{{Fallen Angel|1945}}'' ''Film/FallenAngel1945'' has Mark Judd, who puts on special gloves to beat a confession out of a suspect.



* ''Film/McQ'' (1974). Creator/JohnWayne's character is implied to have beaten up suspects in the past. One occasion has a radical giving him lip in a corridor, whereupon Wayne stamps on his foot. When another cop asks what happened, John Wayne replies, "He stubbed his foot on a chair." (The corridor is empty of chairs.)

to:

* ''Film/McQ'' (1974). Creator/JohnWayne's character in ''Film/McQ'' (1974) is implied to have beaten up suspects in the past. One occasion has a radical giving him lip in a corridor, whereupon Wayne stamps on his foot. When another cop asks what happened, John Wayne replies, "He stubbed his foot on a chair." (The corridor is empty of chairs.)



* The LAPD are called out for this in ''Film/{{SWAT}}'' when a fleeing African suspect is apprehended. The accuser knows full well that the officers are none other than Samuel L. Jackson and LL Cool J, making the suggestion either TooDumbToLive or PlayedForLaughs, you pick it.
* ''Film/RoboCop1987'' uses this trope to satirize the [[DirtyCop notoriously trigger-happy]] police forces of major American cities, and is an over-the-top parody of the "tough on crime" attitude in general. [=RoboCop=] has an ObstructiveCodeOfConduct that means he will NeverHurtAnInnocent, but aside from that, he's free to enforce the law using as violent means as possible as long as he technically doesn't do anything illegal. Apparently, this doesn't extend to [[DestinationDefenestration throwing a perp out a window]] or [[GroinAttack shooting an attempted rapist in the balls.]]

to:

* The LAPD are called out for this in ''Film/{{SWAT}}'' ''Film/SWAT2003'' when a fleeing African African-American suspect is apprehended. The accuser knows full well that the officers are none other than Samuel L. Jackson Creator/SamuelLJackson and LL Cool J, Music/LLCoolJ, making the suggestion either TooDumbToLive or PlayedForLaughs, you pick it.
* ''Film/RoboCop1987'' uses this trope to satirize the [[DirtyCop [[RabidCop notoriously trigger-happy]] police forces of major American cities, and is an over-the-top parody of the "tough on crime" attitude in general. [=RoboCop=] has an ObstructiveCodeOfConduct that means he will NeverHurtAnInnocent, but aside from that, he's free to enforce the law using as violent means as possible as long as he technically doesn't do anything illegal. Apparently, this doesn't extend to [[DestinationDefenestration throwing a perp out a window]] or [[GroinAttack shooting an attempted rapist in the balls.]]balls]].



* In ''[[Film/{{Detroit}} Detroit]]'', cops raid the Algiers Motel during the 1967 riot for the source of shots fired. By the end of the night, three black teens would be dead.

to:

* In ''[[Film/{{Detroit}} Detroit]]'', ''Film/{{Detroit}}'', cops raid the Algiers Motel during the 1967 riot for the source of shots fired. By the end of the night, three black teens would be dead.



* ''Film/HowToBlowUpAPipeline'': Xochitl gets clubbed by a cop just for protesting at them roughly dragging Theo away.

to:

* ''Film/HowToBlowUpAPipeline'': Xochitl gets clubbed by a cop just for protesting at them roughly dragging Theo away.away.
----
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* ''Film/BillyClub2013'': The police who arrest Bobby in the middle of the movie like to administer beatings to their prisoners, as seen with the one who manhandled Bobby in his own cell. Bobby is seen cowering in the corner from watching the beating, and is left in his cell with the guy after his beating. Plus, when Bobby gets out, we see bruises all over his sides and back, which he says the cops gave him.

to:

* ''Film/BillyClub2013'': The police who arrest Bobby in the middle of the movie like to administer beatings to their prisoners, as seen with the one who manhandled Bobby in his own cell. Bobby is seen cowering in the corner from watching the beating, and is left in his cell with the guy after his beating. Plus, when Bobby gets out, we see bruises all over his sides and back, which he says the cops gave him.him.
* ''Film/HowToBlowUpAPipeline'': Xochitl gets clubbed by a cop just for protesting at them roughly dragging Theo away.
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* In ''Film/AManCalledSledge'', Sledge's plan relies on him being locked up in the prison for the night. However, the warden plans to hand him over to Sheriff Ripley to be held in the county jail overnight because he hasn't been convicted of anything yet. So Sledge goads Ripley by taunting over the death of his deputy till Ripley not only punches him, but [[KickThemWhileTheyAreDown kicks him several times while he is own the floor]]. The warden is horrified and--fearing Sledge might not survive a night in the jail--agrees to hold him overnight.

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* In ''Film/AManCalledSledge'', Sledge's plan relies on him being locked up in the prison for the night. However, the warden plans to hand him over to Sheriff Ripley to be held in the county jail overnight because he hasn't been convicted of anything yet. So Sledge goads Ripley by taunting over the death of his deputy till Ripley not only punches him, but [[KickThemWhileTheyAreDown kicks him several times while he is own the floor]]. The warden is horrified and--fearing Sledge might not survive a night in the jail--agrees to hold him overnight.overnight.
* ''Film/BillyClub2013'': The police who arrest Bobby in the middle of the movie like to administer beatings to their prisoners, as seen with the one who manhandled Bobby in his own cell. Bobby is seen cowering in the corner from watching the beating, and is left in his cell with the guy after his beating. Plus, when Bobby gets out, we see bruises all over his sides and back, which he says the cops gave him.
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* ''Film/RPM1970'': When the police come to remove the students from the building, some of them beat unarmed protestors with batons.

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* ''Film/RPM1970'': When the police come to remove the students from the building, some of them beat unarmed protestors with batons.batons.
* In ''Film/AManCalledSledge'', Sledge's plan relies on him being locked up in the prison for the night. However, the warden plans to hand him over to Sheriff Ripley to be held in the county jail overnight because he hasn't been convicted of anything yet. So Sledge goads Ripley by taunting over the death of his deputy till Ripley not only punches him, but [[KickThemWhileTheyAreDown kicks him several times while he is own the floor]]. The warden is horrified and--fearing Sledge might not survive a night in the jail--agrees to hold him overnight.
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* ''Film/Dementia1955'': It was necessary for that detective to intervene when the wino grabbed the woman in the alley and tried to force some liquor down her throat. It was not necessary for the detective to then beat the man senseless with a billy club, as both the detective and the woman laugh mockingly as blood pours down the wino's face.

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* ''[[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0317851/ The Cordon]]'': Serbian riot police brutally cracks down anti-[[UsefulNotes/SlobodanMilosevic Milosevic]] protests in 1997. The film tries to humanize the riot policemen, showing that most of them are merely PunchClockVillains, a couple of them are seriously questioning what they do, and finally, there are a few who actually like what they do.

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* ''[[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0317851/ The Cordon]]'': ''Film/TheCordon'': Serbian riot police brutally cracks down anti-[[UsefulNotes/SlobodanMilosevic Milosevic]] protests in 1997. The film tries to humanize the riot policemen, showing that most of them are merely PunchClockVillains, a couple of them are seriously questioning what they do, and finally, there are a few who actually like what they do.do.
* ''Film/RPM1970'': When the police come to remove the students from the building, some of them beat unarmed protestors with batons.
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* ''Film/GettingStraight'': During a protest, police beat protestors with batons and spray them with fire hoses, knocking them down a flight of concrete stairs.

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* ''Film/GettingStraight'': During a protest, police beat protestors with batons and spray them with fire hoses, knocking them down a flight of concrete stairs.stairs.
* ''[[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0317851/ The Cordon]]'': Serbian riot police brutally cracks down anti-[[UsefulNotes/SlobodanMilosevic Milosevic]] protests in 1997. The film tries to humanize the riot policemen, showing that most of them are merely PunchClockVillains, a couple of them are seriously questioning what they do, and finally, there are a few who actually like what they do.
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* In ''Film/TheStrawberryStatement'', Simon's right-wing rowing teammate punches him in the face, giving him a bloody lip. He spits blood on his shirt and smears it on his face so he can pretend to be a police brutality victim in order to increase his clout. Later he experiences the real thing when cops raid the building and start kicking and beating peaceful protesters.

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* In ''Film/TheStrawberryStatement'', Simon's right-wing rowing teammate punches him in the face, giving him a bloody lip. He spits blood on his shirt and smears it on his face so he can pretend to be a police brutality victim in order to increase his clout. Later he experiences the real thing when cops raid the building and start kicking and beating peaceful protesters.protesters.
* ''Film/GettingStraight'': During a protest, police beat protestors with batons and spray them with fire hoses, knocking them down a flight of concrete stairs.
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* ''Film/{{Glass}}'': Cops in the employ of the AncientConspiracy murder [[spoiler:David and Kevin]] under a guise of taking down dangerous threats (when both were actually no longer threats when this happened).

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* ''Film/{{Glass}}'': ''Film/Glass2019'': Cops in the employ of the AncientConspiracy murder [[spoiler:David and Kevin]] under a guise of taking down dangerous threats (when both were actually no longer threats when this happened).
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* The setting of ''Pride and Glory'' begins with a group of corrupt cops deciding to get rid of Angel Tezo so that they can do business with another dealer. The plan starts to go downhill when Tezo escapes from a botched hit, forcing the group into a frantic search to find and kill him before anyone else in the NYPD discovers his connections with them. The corrupt cops eventually catch Tezo and have him tortured before being killed. Unfortunately, the last moments of the brutality were witnessed by Ray, another officer on the task-force which was assigned to investigate the incident, which is later followed by a private interview between a reporter and Sandy, another corrupt officer who soon commits suicide after exposing the group that he used to work with.

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* The setting of ''Pride and Glory'' ''Film/PrideAndGlory'' begins with a group of corrupt cops deciding to get rid of Angel Tezo so that they can do business with another dealer. The plan starts to go downhill when Tezo escapes from a botched hit, forcing the group into a frantic search to find and kill him before anyone else in the NYPD discovers his connections with them. The corrupt cops eventually catch Tezo and have him tortured before being killed. Unfortunately, the last moments of the brutality were witnessed by Ray, another officer on the task-force which was assigned to investigate the incident, which is later followed by a private interview between a reporter and Sandy, another corrupt officer who soon commits suicide after exposing the group that he used to work with.

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* In ''[[Film/SeventyOne '71]]'', the RUC are violent and abusive when they search the homes of Catholics for guns. When the soldiers arrive in the west Belfast neighbourhood, the local children throw water balloons (filled with urine) and verbal abuse at them. When the RUC arrive, [[OhCrap they beat a hasty retreat]].

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* In ''[[Film/SeventyOne '71]]'', ''Film/SeventyOne'', the RUC are violent and abusive when they search the homes of Catholics for guns. When the soldiers arrive in the west Belfast neighbourhood, the local children throw water balloons (filled with urine) and verbal abuse at them. When the RUC arrive, [[OhCrap they beat a hasty retreat]].



* ''Film/LightSleeper'': Slimy cop [[SmugSnake Radone]] slams [[PunchClockVillain John]] into a shop window hard enough to break the glass to intimidate him.

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* ''Film/LightSleeper'': Slimy cop [[SmugSnake Radone]] slams [[PunchClockVillain John]] into a shop window hard enough to break the glass to intimidate him.him.
* In ''Film/TheStrawberryStatement'', Simon's right-wing rowing teammate punches him in the face, giving him a bloody lip. He spits blood on his shirt and smears it on his face so he can pretend to be a police brutality victim in order to increase his clout. Later he experiences the real thing when cops raid the building and start kicking and beating peaceful protesters.
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* The Taiwanese police in ''Film/CrimeStory'' is depicted as such, having the protagonist, Eddie, arrested, subjected to {{Shameful Strip}}ping and beating him up to force a confession from him. Meanwhile, Eddie's boss, Hung, is free to use his mob connections to escape a beating, and is shown having a casual chat with the Taiwanese superintendent while Eddie is getting the snot beaten out of him.
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* Freebie from ''Film/FreebieAndTheBean'' jumps at the slightest excuse to beat people up. He punches one man in the face as a greeting.

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* Freebie from ''Film/FreebieAndTheBean'' jumps at the slightest excuse to beat people up. He punches one man in the face as a greeting.greeting.
* ''Film/LightSleeper'': Slimy cop [[SmugSnake Radone]] slams [[PunchClockVillain John]] into a shop window hard enough to break the glass to intimidate him.
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* ''Film/AcrossTheUniverse'': The National Guardsmen during the Detroit Riots shoot unarmed Black people simply for looting. NYPD officers later beat up peaceful protesters, and Jude when he's trying to help Lucy.

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* ''Film/AcrossTheUniverse'': ''Film/AcrossTheUniverse2007'': The National Guardsmen during the Detroit Riots shoot unarmed Black people simply for looting. NYPD officers later beat up peaceful protesters, and Jude when he's trying to help Lucy.
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* ''Film/BornOnTheFourthOfJuly'': In every protest scene, the police attack the protesters with batons flying even if they're completely peaceful, and the Kent State incident (where four were shot) gets mentioned too.

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* ''Film/BornOnTheFourthOfJuly'': In every protest scene, the police attack the protesters with batons flying even if they're completely peaceful, and the Kent State incident (where four were shot) gets mentioned too.too.
* Freebie from ''Film/FreebieAndTheBean'' jumps at the slightest excuse to beat people up. He punches one man in the face as a greeting.
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* In ''[[Film/SeventyOne '71]]'', the RUC are violent and abusive when they search the homes of Catholics for guns. When the soldiers arrive in the west Belfast neighbourhood, the local children throw water balloons (filled with urine) and verbal abuse at them. When the RUC arrive, [[OhCrap they beat a hasty retreat]].
* An early example can be found in the 1941 FilmNoir ''Film/IWakeUpScreaming'' and its 1953 {{remake}} ''Vicki''. A detective browbeats his lieutenant into giving him the murder case of a beautiful model. He does everything in his power to pin the killing on her publicist: beating him, breaking into his apartment, and planting evidence. [[spoiler:In truth, he's known from the beginning that another man killed her. He doesn't care, though.]]
* In ''Film/{{Convoy}}'' Spider Mike, one of the truckers forming the eponymous convoy, is brutally beaten down by the Sheriff of a little Texas town.
* ''Film/LaHaine'' shows a particularly brutal vicious circle relationship between the Paris police and a group of teenage thugs from the local banlieues. The police raid the deprived banlieues, the people who live there fight back, which means the police crack down harder on the area, which means the people start rioting... [[spoiler:It eventually culminates in the police [[IJustShotMarvinInTheFace shooting an unarmed teenage boy by accident]], and one officer and the boy's best friend [[MexicanStandoff holding guns to each other's heads]]. End of film.]]
** [[spoiler:With a single gunshot, just after the screen goes black, as well.]]
* ''Film/{{Fallen Angel|1945}}'' has Mark Judd, who puts on special gloves to beat a confession out of a suspect.
* ''Film/LakeviewTerrace'' shows a newlywed couple being terrorized by a {{corrupt cop}} neighbor, who is played by Creator/SamuelLJackson, someone you don't want to mess with. His only problem with them seems to be their [[MalignedMixedMarriage mixed-race relationship]]... although it's also possible that that's just an excuse.
* In ''Film/AClockworkOrange'', the cops beat up Alex to the point where he's a quivering, bloody mess in a corner and offer to hold him down to let his ''parole officer'' take a few swings at him. After he gets freed, he gets assaulted by hobos, then bumps his old gang members Georgie and Dim, who have been hired as cops. They're happy to "get paid to beat people up", they haven't forgotten when he violently kept them in line in his gang, and they [[TheDogBitesBack take revenge on him]] by holding his head underwater in a trough and beat him with their batons doing so.
* ''Film/McQ'' (1974). Creator/JohnWayne's character is implied to have beaten up suspects in the past. One occasion has a radical giving him lip in a corridor, whereupon Wayne stamps on his foot. When another cop asks what happened, John Wayne replies, "He stubbed his foot on a chair." (The corridor is empty of chairs.)
* The ''Film/VForVendetta'' film has the Fingermen, who are the Norsefire party's SecretPolice. They are allowed to pretty much do anything, though as order in England breaks down, people put up with them less and less. This culminates in a Fingerman shooting an ''unarmed little girl'' who was spray-painting a V symbol. A lot of people -- very ''mean''-looking people -- then come out of their houses and kill the guy despite his gun and badge.
** Of specific note is that V only meets Evey because he has to intervene to save her from a police gang rape.
--> '''Fingerman:''' ...we exercise our own judicial discretion.
--> '''Another Fingerman:''' And you get to swallow it.
* ''Film/TheCatInTheHat'' does a comedic take on this. While distracting Conrad and Sally's mom, the Things dress up as police officers and give her a ticket. Thing One accidentally eats the ticket, prompting Thing Two to give him the Heimlich Maneuver. Thing One has this to say, "Police brutality! Illegal chokehold!"
* ''Film/{{Changeling}}'' has this. A mother loses her son and asks the police to get him back. They come back with the ''wrong kid'' and have her sent to the loonie bin to keep their credibility. [[FreakierThanFiction It was a true story.]]
* ''Film/TheImaginariumOfDoctorParnassus'' has the song ''"We Love Violence (Join the Fuzz)"'' where a troupe of singing, dancing policemen extols the virtues of being able to perform violence within the law.
* In ''Film/IpMan2'', one British policeman has his buddies hold down [[spoiler:editor-in-chief Kan]] while he deals out a beating.
* The first movie in the Michael Bay ''[[Film/TransformersFilmSeries Transformers]]'' series had a cop threaten to "bust [Sam] up" for looking at his gun. Because reaching for a gun won't cause people to automatically look at you.
* The first ''Film/DirtyHarry'' movie has Harry roughing up the Scorpio Killer while in custody to learn where he had hidden a kidnapped girl, [[WhatTheHellHero and getting called out on it]]. After Scorpio gets let out of custody because of it and other red tape issues, [[PoliceBrutalityGambit the killer pays a guy to beat the crap out of him so he can blame the beating on Harry, whose only defense is that it couldn't have been him, 'cause if he was the one who beat him, the guy would look a lot worse.]]
** Subsequent films continue the trend, naturally.
-->'''Briggs''': I've got nothing personal against you, Callahan, but we can't have the public crying 'police brutality!' every time you go out on the street.
* ''Film/TheFighter'' has some cops break Micky's hands simply due to him being a fighter. It's also worth noting that he didn't do as much damage as his brother, Dickey.
* In 2010 film ''Film/TheTraveler'', the Drifter was assaulted extremely badly to the point of coma by Detective Black and the rest of the police officers who were at the interrogation scene. This sets off the entire vengeance plot of the film.
* In ''Film/RedState'', the local Sheriff accidentally shoots one of the hostages, who had escaped with a rifle in hand. The ATF then panics, declares the entire Cooper family to be domestic terrorists, and orders everyone killed. [[spoiler:The federal agents wind up murdering the remaining hostage and several unarmed people over the rest of the movie.]]
* The action-comedy ''Film/NationalSecurity'' kicks off with a white cop allegedly beating an innocent black man. In reality, the cop was about to arrest the guy for attempted Grand Theft Auto and resisting arrest (as well as insulting him). Then a "big-ass bumblebee" showed up, and the suspect, who is allergic to bees, asked the cop to get rid of it. Which the cop did... with his nightstick. A tourist films the whole thing from far away and from an angle that hides the bumblebee. The shot of the suspect on TV suggests he was brutally beaten up, due to his face being swollen. He shows up the next day completely fine, explaining that it was an allergic reaction to the bumblebee. He still maintains that he was assaulted, though (the cop does admit in court that he missed the bumblebee a few times and hit the guy). The cop loses his job and is jailed for 6 months (which is done more for PR than anything). When he comes out, the only job he can get is in security.
* In ''Film/MenaceIISociety'', Caine and Sharif are beaten by cops and left in a rival gang's neighbourhood.
* This is present quite a bit in ''Film/LAConfidential''. The most noteworthy example is probably the Bloody Christmas scandal, where a bunch of alcohol-imbibed officers rough up a group of unarmed prisoners as retaliation against the beating up of a pair of cops earlier that evening.
* The setting of ''Pride and Glory'' begins with a group of corrupt cops deciding to get rid of Angel Tezo so that they can do business with another dealer. The plan starts to go downhill when Tezo escapes from a botched hit, forcing the group into a frantic search to find and kill him before anyone else in the NYPD discovers his connections with them. The corrupt cops eventually catch Tezo and have him tortured before being killed. Unfortunately, the last moments of the brutality were witnessed by Ray, another officer on the task-force which was assigned to investigate the incident, which is later followed by a private interview between a reporter and Sandy, another corrupt officer who soon commits suicide after exposing the group that he used to work with.
* Seen in ''Film/InTheMouthOfMadness'', where a cop viciously beating an unarmed graffiti artist and threatening the protagonist is one of the early signs that something is wrong with people. He later sees a nightmare of the same scene, except that the cop has become an inhuman monster.
* In ''Film/BoyzNTheHood'', Officer Coffey is a black policeman [[BoomerangBigot who is racist towards other blacks]] because he thinks they're all criminals. When he and his partner question Tre and Ricky, Coffey shoves a gun in Tre's face to see him scared for his life and explains that he signed up specifically to rough up those he hates.
* In ''Film/KillerKlownsFromOuterSpace'', a small-town police officer tries to do this to one of the titular invaders. [[MuggingTheMonster It doesn't end well for him.]]
* ''Film/{{Surveillance}}'' features a pair of police officers who enjoy shooting out the tires of passing motorists and then terrorizing said motorists, claiming that speeding led to the tire blowing out.
* ''Film/TalesFromTheHood'': Billy, Newton, and Strom conspire to murder a black politician who was exposing their drug-dealing business. Their victim subsequently rises from the grave to get revenge.
* The LAPD are called out for this in ''Film/{{SWAT}}'' when a fleeing African suspect is apprehended. The accuser knows full well that the officers are none other than Samuel L. Jackson and LL Cool J, making the suggestion either TooDumbToLive or PlayedForLaughs, you pick it.
* ''Film/RoboCop1987'' uses this trope to satirize the [[DirtyCop notoriously trigger-happy]] police forces of major American cities, and is an over-the-top parody of the "tough on crime" attitude in general. [=RoboCop=] has an ObstructiveCodeOfConduct that means he will NeverHurtAnInnocent, but aside from that, he's free to enforce the law using as violent means as possible as long as he technically doesn't do anything illegal. Apparently, this doesn't extend to [[DestinationDefenestration throwing a perp out a window]] or [[GroinAttack shooting an attempted rapist in the balls.]]
* "Use of unnecessary violence in the apprehension of Film/TheBluesBrothers has been approved."
* ''Film/BridgeOfSpies'' features standard beatdowns from Soviet and East German security forces. Meanwhile, American police aren't too excited about helping James Donovan after his defense of Soviet spy Rudolf Abel, leaving him to the wolves of America's populace.
* In ''Film/{{Suffragette}}'', the policemen throw women to the floor and then proceed to beat them up.
* ''Film/MalcolmX'', a biographical film of Malcolm X, opens with alternating scenes of a burning American flag and the Rodney King beating.
* ''Film/TheyLive'': When the cops raid the homeless camp, they brutally beat people with no provocation in most cases, or use excessive force against the few who attempt to resist (including the minister, who's ''blind'').
* ''Film/ZabriskiePoint'' by Creator/MichelangeloAntonioni deals with LA's counterculture of TheSixties, and features police as trigger-happy, stupid, and racist.
* ''Film/GoodbyeLenin'' has an important scene in which an anti-government demonstration the main character takes part in is violently suppressed by the police, leading to his mother having a heart attack (his pleas for his mother are only rewarded by being herded into the back of a truck, held down, and beaten up). Justified as the setting is East Germany when it was still under an oppressive totalitarian communist regime.
* In ''Film/WhereTheSidewalkEnds'', this the moving force of the plot. Dixon has gotten many warnings about his violent behavior towards suspects, so much so that he will be demoted if it happens again. His altercation with Ken Paine, and his subsequent death, makes him turn into a full out criminal.
* In ''[[Film/{{Detroit}} Detroit]]'', cops raid the Algiers Motel during the 1967 riot for the source of shots fired. By the end of the night, three black teens would be dead.
* In ''Film/DenOfThieves'', O'Brien and the Major Crimes Squad have no issues with beating information out of a suspect.
* ''Film/StrangeDays'': Complaints around this have heightened racial tensions in the US during the film, and in particular the plot revolves around an outspoken rapper being killed by two cops, which is inadvertently recorded, with them trying to track down the recording.
* ''Film/FirstBlood'' has its plot kick off when small-town police manhandle Franchise/{{Rambo}}, a ShellShockedVeteran, in custody, when all they were supposed to do was clean him up for his court appearance. Their attempt to forcefully shave him presses his TraumaButton and he escapes, beginning the manhunt that forms the story. One cop spends the rest of his screentime trying to ''[[RabidCop literally]]'' hunt Rambo down with a hunting rifle; he starts with trying to [[StopOrIWillShoot shoot the unarmed man on a crowded street]] and progresses to sniping him from a helicopter.
* ''Film/NoGodNoMaster'': The NYPD breaks up a rally by the anarchist Emma Goldman and IWW union organizer Carlo Tresca, even though neither they nor the listeners committed any crime, liberally beating people with batons despite Flynn's objections.
* ''Film/SeeYouYesterday'': A pair of police officers shoot Claudette's brother due to being mistaken for robbers.
* ''Film/DarkAngelTheAscent'': Two of Veronica's victims were a couple racist white cops who harassed and then beat a black man for no reason except he was there. It later turns out the pair both had some long records of complaints for excessive force. The police officer guarding the mayor who later shoots Veronica is another example, as he does this after ordering her to stop while flying, even though she didn't have a weapon or pose any visible threat.
* In ''Film/SnuffMovie'', the police take Andy into an empty room and kick the shit out of him for wasting their time and making them look like fools.
* ''Film/TheGirlFromMonday'': [[spoiler:William]] is shot dead by the police for running away from them.
* ''Film/TalesFromTheHood2'': In the changed reality Henry finds himself in "The Sacrifice", the Klan Patrol have no reservations about beating to death a black man they think raped a white woman.
* ''Film/MargaritaWithAStraw'': Laila meets Khanum while at a protest over the death of a black man who NYPD officers shot which is alleged to result from this. The protest then shows examples itself as it gets unruly and the police heavy-handed. Laila mentions the Delhi Police where she's from are also like this.
* ''Film/TurkeyShoot'': In the opening scene, a pair of police officers chase a running man into Chris' shop, then they start kicking him after he falls down. Her protesting it makes them suspect that she's his accomplice and she gets sent off to a reeducation camp.
* ''Film/TheWorldUnseen'': The White South African police are quite brutal, hitting people freely and threatening Miriam with having her children taken away to get information.
* ''Film/TheTrialOfTheChicago7'': 99% of the police footage in this film is of them beating and arresting protestors (usually without any cause), including one scene where they rip off their badges before assaulting them right outside a fancy diner. Fred Hampton is also killed by police offscreen when he was already helpless. "Executed", Seale rightly says.
* ''Film/FaceOff'':
** The Erewhon prison guards use far more force than is necessary, including electroshock treatment on prisoners as punishment, which the head guard at least clearly enjoys.
** Castor, disguised as Archer, leads FBI agents in opening fire on Dietrich's penthouse with no attempt to announce themselves or arrest them. Legally, this is attempted murder, and Director Lazarro is outraged by this afterward, calling it "Gestapo tactics".
* ''Film/{{Glass}}'': Cops in the employ of the AncientConspiracy murder [[spoiler:David and Kevin]] under a guise of taking down dangerous threats (when both were actually no longer threats when this happened).
* In ''Film/RiotOnSunsetStrip'', Lieutenant Lorimer gives television speeches about the importance of nonviolent law enforcement, but he eventually loses control and punches his daughter's rapists in the hospital.
* ''Film/AcrossTheUniverse'': The National Guardsmen during the Detroit Riots shoot unarmed Black people simply for looting. NYPD officers later beat up peaceful protesters, and Jude when he's trying to help Lucy.
* ''Film/ForbiddenLoveTheUnashamedStoriesOfLesbianLives'': The police used to target lesbians with harassment, beatings and even rape.
* ''Film/TheSiege'': FBI Agent Frank backhands Samir, a handcuffed suspect, after he insults him. Hubbard chews him out, while Frank defends himself by offering to tell him what Samir's people (the Palestinians) did to his village in Lebanon (presumably during the Lebanese Civil War, when numerous massacres were committed on all sides).
* In ''Film/ElectraGlideInBlue'', this is one of Detective Poole's favorite tactics. When the members of a hippie commune won't tell him where a certain drug dealer is, Poole punches random people until someone starts talking.
* The corrupt vigilante cops [[spoiler: led by Lt. Neil Briggs]] in ''Film/MagnumForce'' enjoy pulling this. As Film/DirtyHarry says, [[ArcWords "A man's got to know his limitations."]]
* ''Film/BornOnTheFourthOfJuly'': In every protest scene, the police attack the protesters with batons flying even if they're completely peaceful, and the Kent State incident (where four were shot) gets mentioned too.

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