This is not closure, it is not an answer, it is a beginning. Throughout all they have been through in this movie this is Kates and Hammond actually introducing themselves to one another, Kates especially. It’s a truce, a cease fire in lieu of a moment of mutual respect. Kates and Hammond are no more friends after this than Colonel Saito, and Lt Colonel Nicholson are after drinks in “The Bridge over the River Kwai. The difference being their goals align a great deal more. The authenticity of Kates , both for better and worse, the lack of humility in the face of anyone, but especially white people from Hammond, is an example of something much more significant than buddies in a cop film, and much more sophisticated than some sense of closure between a racist and a classically trained black musician on a road trip (The Green Book Im looking at you). It is a masterpiece of that genre (Action/ Buddy Cop), and unless you commit to the idea that any one category or genre of movies is inherently less than another is it not then a masterpiece of cinema? The movie has no fat, there is not a scene I would throw away. Though the story is familiar (a dubious criticism to make if not expounded upon because most stories in film are familiar especially at this point.) It finds so much of its own rhythm and personality that it feels new and at the very least unique even now after all its copies. It’s rare that films are so unique, that that uniqueness is what makes us fall in love with them, its usually in the approach that we find love. Besides that, sometimes the sum of a films parts are so great , it too is a classic by committee. Hill’s direction is great, the acting (mostly by men) is outstanding, from its two stars to James Remar as Ganz, (I could write a separate piece as to his importance to this film, and his wonderful brand of acting) Landham, and David Patrick Kelly ( a firebrand of a character actor , and a frequent Hill contributor), and James Horner’s Jazz infused score is as wild, gritty and meticulous as the movie itself. It’s not the smooth and seamless score that Lalo Schafrin’s built into “Bullit”, it has much in common with its star Eddie Murphy - its boisterous, and prone to improvisation which caused the potential for distraction, and incongruency, but again like Murphy ends up becoming a star in the film. The way it goes beat for beat with the beats in the film, complimenting, providing its own exposition, informing, while sounding like a impromptu jam session of the some awfully great performers is magical. Watch the subway scene and take note how it does all of the above…