
A young couple (Patrick Wilson and Kerry Washington) has just moved into their California dream home when they become the target of their next-door neighbor, who disapproves of their relationship. A stern, single father, this tightly wound LAPD officer (Samuel L. Jackson) has appointed himself the watchdog of the neighborhood. His nightly foot patrols and overly watchful eyes bring comfort to some, but he becomes increasingly aggressive to the newlyweds. These persistent intrusions into their lives cause the couple to fight back with devastating consequences!
Interracial couple Chris (Patrick Wilson) and Lisa (Kerry Washington) buy a home in upscale LA and earn the disapproval of Abel Turner (Samuel L. Jackson), the widowed black beat cop next door, who has strict ‘rules’ about things — and ways to enforce them.
Given that his last film as director was the ill-advised and best-forgotten one-star remake of The Wicker Man, a Neil LaBute Care Bears movie would be hailed a return to form — but Lakeview Terrace is a canny, effective mix of personal concerns with commercial storytelling.
The pitch is Changing Lanes (angry Samuel L. Jackson feuds with white yuppie) meets Unlawful Entry (unethical, obsessive cop uses badge to persecute nice couple), but star-vehicle social drama and stalker thriller meld seamlessly for a thought-provoking, nail-biting evening.
The script is by David Loughery and Howard Korder, though the crack an obnoxious white yuppie with an Asian trophy girlfriend makes about “the Pacific Rim” must come from a LaBute dialogue polish, and patches of talk sound as stage-honed as his plays. The film touches on the deep, uncomfortable modern issues of race and masculinity that crop up in LaBute’s all-round auteur works (no other white director in the US would chance a film about a black racist), but it’s also a literally slow-burning thriller (out-of-control brush fires get closer to Lakeview Terrace throughout, casting an infernal glow on the horizon) on the Psycho Bastard From Hell theme (sibling to the overworked Psycho Bitch From Hell sub-genre of Fatal Attraction and The Hand That Rocks The Cradle). As is often the case in threat-to-a-happy-home movies, the build-up of irritating behaviour would be hard to make a federal case over and is more agonising than the last-reel homicidal mania — though there’s a priceless twist when Abel forces his neighbours to be grateful to him for seemingly saving their lives when he’s intending to scare them out of the neighbourhood.
The Wilson and Washington characters have their own hang-ups and are okay identification figures, but the film stands or falls on Jackson in one of his most full-on performances. Abel is a simmering martinet at home and near-crazy in uniform, teeming with aggressive tics like shining security lights through windows, giving a coffee table book about African-American culture as a housewarming present, ratting out Chris for smoking behind his wife’s back, and siccing a lap-dancer on the hero when he turns up to complain about a stag party then sending his wife a DVD of the aftermath sealed with a lipstick kiss. But Jackson strings out the torment with half-plausible friendliness as he flashes a smile scarier than The Joker’s — at once ingratiating, bullying and gloating.
When we do get to the root of his hostility — everyone gets an ‘origin story’ these days — Jackson gets a stand-out barroom speech, rising from calm reason to that inimitable ‘fuck you’ shout, footnoting his many grudges against the world. Subtle tactics turn to outright home invasion, and the movie drops slightly as the modern thriller’s fallback prop — the mobile phone — enters play.
As a thriller it’s solid three-star tension. As a Samuel L. Jackson showcase it proves a man can only coast through so many motherfuckin’ or milquetoastin’ turns before having to display his full and overpowering talent.

Samuel L. Jackson ... Abel Turner
Patrick Wilson ... Chris Mattson
Kerry Washington ... Lisa Mattson
Ron Glass ... Harold Perreau
Justin Chambers ... Donnie Eaton
Jay Hernandez ... Javier Villareal
Regine Nehy ... Celia Turner
Jaishon Fisher ... Marcus Turner
Robert Pine ... Captain Wentworth
Keith Loneker ... Clarence Darlington
Caleeb Pinkett ... Damon Richards
Robert Dahey ... Jung Lee Pak
Ho-Jung ... Sang Hee Pak
Dallas Raines ... TV Weatherman
Bitsie Tulloch ... Nadine
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