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A bunch of screw-ups, all with one note characters (Look! Jones makes funny sounds! Tackleberry likes heavy weaponry!"). The men chase the ladies, successfully, who in turn find many excuses to run through water sprinklers in white t-shirts. There's a Mean Enemy, and a Big Enemy. The Mean Enemy usually is associated with the screw-ups and tries to make them look bad at every opportunity. He has no sense of humor and is repeatedly humiliated by said screw-ups. The Big Enemy does criminal acts, but is easily caught. And happily, there is no attempt at realism. I don't need realism when I watch movies, I need fluffy elephants slipping on squirrel poop and gratuitous music sequences. Have I even begun to talk about this movie! Good gravy, no. Although Police Academy 5 was a decent run (and about the last good Police Academy movie made), number four is the end of the original franchise. You know what I'm talking about — Steve Guttenburgenstein. Despite being as famous as Showgirls and rich as many kings, Steve graces us one last time as Officer Mahoney. At the film's onset, we're treated to some really bad 80's rap (you know, back when you could understand the words rappers were rapping about) and the worst criminal act known to mankind: skateboarding. Seriously. The district is overrun or something by like three skateboarders, one of whom is David Spade. Seriously. David Spade, skateboarder. I cannot think of anything more frightening than skateboarding, unless it is skateboarding without safety gear and that horrid game Tony Hawk Pro Skater (it's stupid, okay? You can't talk me out of it!). Speaking of Tony... he's supposedly Spade's stunt boarder here. In an attempt to pass the torch to a new generation of policemen (or something), our beloved cops start a COP program to get Citizens On Patrol. That seems like a very wussy thing for police to do, to enlist the help of even more screwed-up people to do their dirty work. So we have the old school of Mahoney, Jones, the big guy who is Bubba Smith, the girl with the really big breasts, and the rest, who meet up with Policedudes: The New Batch, which consist of David Spade, a bloodthirsty old lady, and a really fat guy who's the only one to make it onto Police Academy 5. Thus follows a long sequence of Harris "This program is going to fail and I'm gonna make it fail!", Mahoney "Just give them a chance, I know they can do it", new screwballs going through training, a few romances, Evil Guy shows up, everyone saves the day. My favorite underdog is Zed (Bobcat Goldthwait), whose voice and face flutters and fluctuates as much as a 70's cartoon. He's funny and frightens the hell out of everyone else. I like that in people. Is Police Academy 4 a superb film? Um, no. Is it juvenile and appeals to the low-brow humor center of boys? Yes. Does it even blatantly rip off concepts and plots from the first three PA flicks? Yuppers. But does it contain the best porta-potty-exposed scene in film history? You know, I do think so. And does Jason make a cameo that is better than all of the Friday the 13th movies combined? Hallelujah, yes. It's the small things in life that make it worthwhile. Essentially, the Police Academy movies are college parties endorsed by major city organizations. I can live with that.
This movie is as rotten as a moldy mouse in a glue trap. Y'know, after everything I went through to rent it (on assignment from Fearless Leader himself, no less) I really REALLY wanted to love it. I wanted to laugh, to cry, to be moved to go forth and achieve great and glorious things on the strength of my cinematic experience. In retrospect, my expectations might have been a bit too lofty and I have taken that under consideration. It still stank like a bloated donkey corpse in July. Don't ask me how I know what one smells like, just trust that I do. And that this did. Anyway, when the only entertainment value of a movie has to be dredged from watching David Spade in his jailbait era, or spotting the Tony Hawk cameo, it cannot be considered a resounding success. Besides, I do believe this was made before Tony Hawk was, well, Tony Hawk... and that means that Police Academy 4 has actually, incredibly, improved with age. Bleurch. The movie itself is the story of a sort of beefed up neighborhood watch program — and basically about how members were recruited and trained, although they did have to throw in a little actual criminal activity just for the look of the thing. Of the dozens of citizens trained for patrol, other than David Spade, I can only remember two of them. One of them was a little old lady. The other one wasn't. The comedy elements — I assume that's what they were — lacked any sort of subtlety, timing, cleverness or... sadly, humor. I have a feeling that the writers either ran out of inspiration or caffeine (probably both) and stretched the pratfalls and practical jokes out as far as they could in an effort to push the entire film to an acceptable feature length. Did we really need a 12-step program for swapping out Right Guard with Mace? It was sort of like "Wacky Hijinks For Dummies", only the For Dummies books tend to be well written and entertaining. This was just boring and inane. Augmenting my time-stretching theory were two pointlessly long interludes; one of a police car aimlessly driving around and the other of skateboarders aimlessly, uhm, skateboarding around. Even the inevitable climactic chase scene smacked of "Let's see how long we can pan on a hot air balloon with our camera before the audience wanders off to find popcorn or check for nose hair or something." I know, I know, Justin lauds movies like this for the exact reasons I just cited for hating it. But with all due respect, there’s not a thing here that wasn’t done better, smarter and smoother in any given Roadrunner cartoon you care to mention. (And the dialogue was better in those too.) In fact, the audience this is best suited for — the 5-10 year old demographic — is summarily disqualified by occasional obscenity and adult-oriented schtuff. More’s the pity.
Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]
Groovy Quotes
Lassard: What is the most frustrating thing about police work?
Zed: People just don’t understand me.
Zed: Cadets, I would now like to discuss with you something that will be vital for you to know when you’re like out there, on the job as a police officer. And that is the correct way on how to eat a doughnut. Mrs. Feldman: Do we get to pack heat?
Harris: Well your little pals wrecked a police car, destroyed a shopping mall, harassed citizens, resisted arrest…
Hightower: I have an urge to break him in half.
Mrs. Feldman: I saw this on Hill Street Blues! Lassard: You will work and train with the police. The police will work and train with you. Working and training. Training and working. If you liked this movie, try these:
This review page was last updated on 12.29.04 MRFH Home . Reviews . Findaflik . Features! . MRFH Forum © 2004 Mutant Reviewers From Hell (Original Content). All Rights Reserved. |