Rated PG-13
111 minutes
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Hollywood Homicide (2003)
October 4, 2003 at 7:00 and 10:00pm in 26-100 and
October 5, 2003 at 10:00pm in 26-100.
"The first action-parody of the buddy cop genre...Director Ron Shelton
takes all of the cop movie clichés and inflates them until they pop."       -- Jeffrey Bruner, Des Moines Register. Read this review.
"To take 'Hollywood Homicide' at surface level is to miss the
point...underneath it has a soul."       -- Jeffrey M. Anderson, The San Francisco Examiner. Read this review.
In a spot-on parody of the buddy-cop genre and Hollywood in general, Harrison Ford,
along with flavor-of-the-day heartthrob Josh Hartnett, are cops...in Hollywood.
A modern Hollywood, in which the glamour is gone, nothing really quite makes
sense, inspiration has made way for merchandising, and everyone is trying to
sell a script or a headshot. To afford the decadently expensive lifestyle,
cops can't live on their policeman salaries alone, so they have second jobs.
Ford is a real estate agent who, while he hasn't been particularly successful
at selling anything, is adept at negotiating on his cellphone during shootouts.
Hartnett's a Yoga instructor who dreams of acting on stage, and can never
remember the names of the gorgeous young women in his class, despite the fact
that he has bedded many of them. They're called in to investigate the murder
of an up-and-coming rap group, and end up in a variety of extremely amusing
situations, including a chase sequence in which the vehicles range from a
little girl's bicycle to a minivan complete with screaming kids in the back
to a paddleboat in a pond.
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