Q&A
directed and written by Sidney Lumet,
based on the novel
by Edwin Torres,
was released in the United States on April 27, 1990.
Music by Rubén Blades.
Nick Nolte, Timothy
Hutton, Armand Assante, Patrick O'Neal, Lee Richardson, Luis Guzmán, Charles S.
Dutton, Jenny Lumet, Paul Calderon, International Chrysis, Dominic Chianese,
Leonardo Cimino, Fyvush Finkel, Gustavo Brens, Martin E. Brens, Maurice Schell,
Thomas Mikal Ford, John Capodice, Frederick Rolf, Hal Lehrman, Gloria Irizarry,
Brian Neill, Susan Mitchell, Drew Eliot, Frank Raiter, Harry Madsen, Jerry
Ciauri, George Kodisch, Burtt Harris, Michael A. Joseph, Cynthia O'Neal, Victor
Colicchio, Anibal O. Lleras, José Rafael Arango, David Dill, Alex Ruiz, Richard
Solchik, Edward Rogers III, Junior Perez, Javier Ríos, June Stein, Rod
Rodriguez, Sonny Vito, Olga Merediz, Peter Gumeny, Edward Rowan, Danny Darrow,
José Collazo, José Alvarez, G.W. Bailey, Janis Corsair, David Hummel.
Recommended reading:
Q&A
By Edwin Torres.
Filmed as Q&A (1990), directed by Sidney Lumet.
Published by Avon Books.
First published 1977.
Paperback.
ISBN-10: 0380018624
ISBN-13: 978-0380018628
Description:
The basis for the hit film "Q & A" directed by Sidney Lumet, starring Nick Nolte. Written by Edwin Torres, the author of After Hours which was the basis for the hit film "Carlito's Way" starring Al Pacino and Sean Penn.
The minute he steps down the alleyway, Tony Roman knows it’s a setup. The first bullet tears through his cheekbone; the second pierces his brain. The big man is dead before he hits the ground. When the crowd pours out of the nightclub to see what happened, the killer flashes a badge. He’s the NYPD’s Lt. Brennan, and he plans to get away with murder.
Assistant District Attorney Al Reilly is called in to investigate the shooting. Everyone in the department expects Reilly, an ex-cop whose father was killed in the line of duty, to support Brennan’s claim of self-defense. But the evidence doesn’t add up. As Reilly digs deeper into the events of that snowy night in the darkened alley, he finds that in the NYPD, there is no crime worse than investigating a crooked cop.