Ratings28
Average rating3.8
It's 1948 Los Angeles and Easy Rawlins suddenly finds himself out of a job with a mortgage to pay.
He loves his home and the pride he gets owning his spot. Easy isn't about to lose his place which leads him to taking DeWitt Albright's money. His gut tells him he should know better even with Joppy's introduction but it's a simple gig. Find one Daphne Monet and tell Albright where she is. Nothing else. But there's no such thing as easy money and the bodies start piling up.
I'm woefully ignorant of the noir genre so I followed this up quickly with the Denzel Washington led movie of the same name. (A young Don Cheadle is absolutely perfect as Mouse.) The two are now intwined in my head despite their slightly differing plot threads.
It's smooth storytelling and amounts to Easy's origin story before becoming a hard boiled dick. (That just sounds ridiculous) For now he's an unwitting and somewhat unwilling detective trying to keep his head above water. I liked the added tension of the police - he's not the grizzled renegade that's a step ahead of the police but a black man just as likely to take the fall for crimes he didn't commit or simply suffer a beating at their hands. It adds an extra dimension to the traditional noir genre.