
Jeff Cole is a recent graduate of the Cincinnati police academy who dreams of working undercover. His wish is granted and through success is given the task of taking down state-wide crack dealer Dwayne Gittens aka "God". Gittens is known as a family man and a man of the people, contributing to his community and helping those in need. However, there is another side to him, a ruthless leader of a criminal empire who will torture or kill anyone without question. Over time, Cole ... (Full plot summary below)
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Jeff Cole is a recent graduate of the Cincinnati police academy who dreams of working undercover. His wish is granted and through success is given the task of taking down state-wide crack dealer Dwayne Gittens aka "God". Gittens is known as a family man and a man of the people, contributing to his community and helping those in need. However, there is another side to him, a ruthless leader of a criminal empire who will torture or kill anyone without question. Over time, Cole develops a close friendship with Gittens. Cole's superiors worry that the line between cop and bad guy is getting blurred and that both identities are becoming one. Cole's loyalties are put to the ultimate test just as there is enough evidence to take Gittens down for good.
Leave your thoughts about In Too Deep.
| Baltimore SunChris KaltenbachFormulaic but effectively gritty inner-city crime drama. |
| Mr. ShowbizKevin MaynardHas a gritty authenticity to it captures the spectacularly crazed quality of urban violence. |
| NewsweekAnjali AroraIt delivers cop-genre thrills at the pace required and reminds us Omar Epps is a star in the making. |
| Los Angeles TimesGene SeymourScript resounds throughout with astringent dialogue and stark authenticity. |
| Film.comSean MeansLL Cool J... is downright scary -- a mix of coiled charm and underlying menace. |
| The New York TimesElvis MitchellTreats its characters seriously and doesn't resort to the obvious very often. |
| Village VoiceGary DauphinThe film does have a canny appreciation for how ghetto realness is acted out. |
| New York Daily NewsJami BernardA well-acted and surprisingly thoughtful treatment of the same old, same old. |
| Philadelphia InquirerSteven ReaA mess of incohesiveness and fragmented storytelling. |
| San Francisco ChronicleMick LaSalleEpps is a leading man on the rise, and Cool J. is something to see. |