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词条 Police Academy 5: Assignment Miami Beach
释义

  1. Plot

  2. Cast

  3. Reception

     Box office 

  4. References

  5. External links

{{Infobox film
| name = Police Academy 5:
Assignment Miami Beach
| image = Police_Academy_5_Miami_Florida.jpg
| caption = Theatrical release poster by Carl Ramsey[1]
| border = yes
| writer = Stephen Curwick
| starring = {{Plain list |
  • Bubba Smith
  • David Graf
  • Michael Winslow
  • Leslie Easterbrook
  • Marion Ramsey
  • Janet Jones
  • Lance Kinsey
  • Matt McCoy
  • G. W. Bailey
  • George Gaynes

}}
| director = Alan Myerson
| producer = Paul Maslansky
Donald West
| cinematography = James Pergola
| editing = Hubert C. de la Bouillerie
| distributor = Warner Bros.
| released = {{film date|1988|3|18}}
| runtime = 90 minutes
| music = Robert Folk
| country = United States
| language = English
| gross = $19,510,371[2]
}}

Police Academy 5: Assignment Miami Beach is the 1988 installment in the Police Academy series, launched in 1984. The film was given a PG rating for language and ribald humor.

Steve Guttenberg was unable to star in this film due to scheduling conflicts with filming Three Men and a Baby. The filmmakers decided instead to cast Matt McCoy as a new character.[3]

Plot

Captain Harris finally finds the goods he needs to push Commandant Eric Lassard out at the Police Academy: he is one year late for mandatory retirement. But before he retires, Lassard is chosen as "Police Officer of the Decade," and brings his favorite graduates—Sgts. Hightower, Jones, Tackleberry and Hooks, Lt. Callahan, and new graduate Officer Thomas "House" Conklin—to the National Police Chiefs Convention in Miami Beach to celebrate with him. While there, they meet his nephew, Sgt. Nick Lassard of the Miami Police Department. Lassard unwittingly takes a bag belonging to jewel thieves containing stolen diamonds.

As the jewel thieves try to get the bag back, and Captain Harris tries to prove to Commissioner Hurst that he's the right man to replace Commandant Lassard, the usual hijinks ensue, including Lassard trying to guess the annual procedural demonstration. When the jewel thieves kidnap Commandant Lassard, he goes willingly, thinking it's indeed the procedural demonstration. It launches a negotiation, which Captain Harris botches, getting himself captured as well. A chase across the Everglades ensues to rescue the oblivious Commandant. In a standoff with the smugglers, Nick explains to his uncle that the situation isn't a demonstration and that his kidnappers are in fact real criminals. Lassard, upon hearing this information, promptly disarms and subdues his assailants to the amazement of all the officers. At a ceremony at the end of the film, Commissioner Hurst announces that Commandant Lassard will be allowed to continue his duties as Commandant until he sees fit to retire, much to Harris' chagrin, as well as Hightower's promotion to Lieutenant.

Lassard is seen proudly graduating the new class. As form of revenge for Harris' earlier sabotage against his uncle, Nick intentionally moves the chair away from Harris. Proctor tries to help him, but kicks the chair too hard and sending both it and Harris on a collision into the drum set. As the police marching band walks off in parade, Harris is seen screaming for Proctor to help him.

Cast

  • Michael Winslow as Sgt. Larvell Jones
  • David Graf as Sgt. Eugene Tackleberry
  • Bubba Smith as Sgt./Lt. Moses Hightower
  • Marion Ramsey as Sgt. Laverne Hooks
  • Leslie Easterbrook as Lt. Debbie Callahan
  • Tab Thacker as Officer Thomas 'House' Conklin
  • George Gaynes as Cmdt. Eric Lassard
  • G. W. Bailey as Capt. Thaddeus Harris
  • Lance Kinsey as Lt. Proctor
  • George R. Robertson as Commissioner Henry Hurst
  • Matt McCoy as Sgt. Nick Lassard
  • Janet Jones as Officer Kate
  • René Auberjonois as Tony
  • Archie Hahn as Mouse
  • James Hampton as Mayor of Miami
  • Scott Weinger as Shark Attack Kid

Reception

The film presently has a 0% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on six reviews.[4]

Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film zero stars, reporting, "I didn't laugh once during the entire film—not at the slapstick, not at the humor, which is pitched at the preschool level."[5] His fellow Tribune critic Dave Kehr awarded one star out of four, describing the gags as "blunt and literal."[6]Caryn James of The New York Times wrote that "the formula is pretty long in the tooth by now, and all the extra turns of plot can't disguise that."[7] Michael Wilmington of the Los Angeles Times thought the film was an improvement over the previous three sequels but that the jokes were still "nothing special."[8] Rita Kempley of The Washington Post called it a "fifth-rate rehash of the rather wonderful original."[9] Nige Floyd of The Monthly Film Bulletin called it "the feeblest to date. Neither the picture-postcard setting nor the bungling jewel thieves add anything to the standard formula, while 'guest star' cops Nick Lassard and Kate Stratton hardly make up for the departure of regulars Steve Guttenberg and Bobcat Goldthwait."[10]

Box office

Police Academy 5: Assignment Miami Beach debuted at number 1 at the box office when it opened on March 18, 1988 with a weekend gross of $6,106,661. It would go on to earn a domestic box office total of $19,510,371. The film faced strong competition in early 1988 from such high-profile comedy releases as Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Coming To America, Big, Crocodile Dundee II, Beetlejuice, Bull Durham, Biloxi Blues, The Great Outdoors, Big Business and Funny Farm.[11]

References

1. ^https://www.imdb.com/name/nm7019894/
2. ^{{cite web| title = Police Academy 5: Assignment Miami Beach at Box Office Mojo| url = http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=policeacademy5.htm| accessdate = September 29, 2010}}
3. ^{{cite news|title= Another 'Police Academy'? No. 5's The Charm, Folks|work=Orlando Sentinel|date=April 17, 1988|url=http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/1988-04-17/entertainment/0030270212_1_leslie-easterbrook-police-academy-fu|accessdate=2010-11-11|publisher=Tribune Publishing|first=Joe Bob|last=Briggs}}
4. ^"Police Academy 5" Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 7, 2018.
5. ^Siskel, Gene (March 25, 1988). "Siskel's Flicks Picks". Chicago Tribune. Section 7, page N-O.
6. ^{{cite news|title= New `Police Academy` Flunks Again, Of Course |publisher= Chicago Tribune|date=1988-03-22|url= http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1988-03-22/features/8803020745_1_police-academy-commandant-lassard-assignment-miami-beach|accessdate=2018-12-07}}
7. ^James, Caryn (March 19, 1988). "[https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE6DB103AF93AA25750C0A96E948260 When a Shark Joins the Usual Academy Gang]". The New York Times. p. 15.
8. ^{{cite news|title= MOVIE REVIEW Improvement Detected in `Police Academy 5' |work= The Los Angeles Times|date=1988-03-22|url= http://articles.latimes.com/1988-03-22/entertainment/ca-1556_1_police-academy|accessdate=2018-12-07|first=Michael|last=Wilmington}}
9. ^Kempley, Rita (March 19, 1988) "'Academy 5': Beach Bomb". The Washington Post. C9.
10. ^{{cite journal |last=Floyd |first=Nige |date=August 1988 |title=Police Academy 5: Assignment Miami Beach |journal=The Monthly Film Bulletin |volume=55 |issue=655 |page=239 }}
11. ^{{cite news|title= WEEKEND BOX OFFICE : New Blood Refreshes Top Five|publisher= Los Angeles Times|date=|url= http://articles.latimes.com/1988-03-22/entertainment/ca-1667_1_box-office |accessdate=2012-07-14}}

External links

  • {{Official website|https://www.warnerbros.com/police-academy-5-assignment-miami-beach}}
  • {{IMDb title|0095882}}
  • {{tcmdb title|86893|Police Academy 5: Assignment Miami Beach}}
  • {{Amg movie|38588}}
{{Police Academy}}

11 : Police Academy film series|1988 films|1980s comedy films|1980s sequel films|American films|American sequel films|English-language films|Films directed by Alan Myerson|Films set in Miami|Warner Bros. films|Films scored by Robert Folk

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