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Police Academy: Mission to Moscow

Police Academy: Mission to Moscow

  • Status: Released
  • 09-06-1994
  • Runtime: 83 min
  • Score: 4.635
  • Vote count: 907

The Russians seek help in dealing with the Mafia from the veterans of the Police Academy. They head off to Moscow, in order to find evidence against Konstantin Konali, who marketed a computer game that everyone in the world is playing.

George Gaynes

Commandant Lassard

Michael Winslow

Jones

David Graf

Tackleberry

Leslie Easterbrook

Callahan

G.W. Bailey

Captain Harris

Christopher Lee

Commandant Rakov

Ron Perlman

Konstantine Konali

Claire Forlani

Katrina

Charlie Schlatter

Cadet Connors

Richard Israel

Adam Sharp

Gregg Berger

Lieutenant Talinsky

Vladimir Dolinskiy

Bellboy

Pamela Guest

Anchor Person

Stuart Nisbet

Anchor Person

David St. James

News Director

Valeriy Yaremenko

Mikhail

Vadim Dolgachov

Leonid

Robert Iannaccone

Training Sergeant

Carolyn Kelson

Mary

Nikolai Pastukhov

Patriarch

Olga Anokhina

Russian Mother

Sergei Danilevitch

Lecturer

Alexander Skorokhod

Yeltsin

Sasha Maslansky

Cadet

Oleg Groonevitch

Russian Police Cadet

Igor Semenkov

Russian Police Cadet

Andrei Vishnyakov

Russian Police Cadet

Konstantin Denakhin

Motorcycle Cop

Sergey Reusenko

Serge

Aleksandr Tyutin

Boris

Aleksandr Peskov

Hitman

Mariya Vinogradova

Old Lady in Gorky Park

Andrey Annenskiy

Little Russian Boy with Bike

Zaven Martirosyan

Ringmaster

Julius LeFlore

Piano Player

Pavel Sanikov

Conductor

Dmitriy Chernigovskiy

Dapper Man

Villie Golovko

Mafia Thug

Amanda LeFlore

Buxom Assistant

Michael Bolotin

Rakov's Guard

Vladimir Salnikov

Rakov's Guard

Andrei Bolotin

Rakov's Guard

Vladimir Goryushin

Russian Father

Platon Gorushin

Russian Son

Nastia Gorushina

Russian Daughter

Pavel Ostroukhov

Priest in Cemetery

Natalya Pozdnyakova

Katrina's Replacement Translator

Yakov Dyrda

Mafia Hood

Min Dabashinskas

Mafia Hood

Willie Golovko

Mafia Hood

Sasha Volkov

Bodyguard

Yury Sysoev

Bodyguard

Zemskovi

Circus Acrobat

Elena Vorobieva

Circus Rope-Climber

Alexander Diamandi

Circus Clown

Yuri Yermachenkov

Circus Clown

Michel Clerte

BMX Championship Bike Team

Michel Lavandet

BMX Championship Bike Team

Olivier Prosper

BMX Championship Bike Team

Olivier Renard

BMX Championship Bike Team

Svetlana

Prima Ballerina

Potential Kermode

**See a boiled egg fly through the air from one mans mouth to another mans mouth and then back again - all in Technicolor!** Comedy - _negligible_. Interest factor - negligible. Original cast members - negligible. Audiences watching it in the theatres in 1994 - negligible. Box office gross - negligible. Farting noises - _absolutely_. Cartoon sound effects - absolutely. Disinterested/embarrassed performances - absolutely. Enthusiastic Russian actors who believe they are performing in a masterpiece - absolutely. After watching this movie I had forgotten how to smile. I saw somebody else laughing and I had to ask them what they were doing with their face and what the _unusual sound_ meant.

Filipe Manuel Neto

**An unnecessary film.** Sometimes it seems producers have a hard time understanding when a movie shouldn't be made. The “Police Academy” franchise should have ended in the sixth film, and even then it would be ending up pretty worn out. This film, made several years later, was an effort that was simply needless and certainly leaves no one with good memories. After seeing the movie, I was really sorry that the franchise ended with such a bad movie. It was something that, for me, should have been avoided. “Police Academy” was one of the most interesting and successful comic franchises of the 80s, and there are still many people who have fond memories of these films today. I myself, as a child, saw them several times on television. The script is perfectly idiotic and a simple excuse to take some of the characters in the film to post-Soviet Russia, where they must help the local police to fight a big mobster who is turning into an oligarch (one of many that, as we know, emerged from the ashes of the communist regime, fat with shady deals in which the Russian people ended up losing). It's an unhappy, poor script made by incapable people. Humor, on the other hand, is completely absent. I don't laugh for a single minute. The cast, which until now had been relatively stable (with the absence of several actors starting from the fourth film), had completely collapsed, and most actors refused to be part of this project. George Gaynes is back, but his character, Commander Lassard, looks simply like an old man with Alzheimer's (with all due respect to anyone suffering from this serious illness, don't get me wrong). Gaynes is not funny, and his performance here is disgraceful. Michael Winslow also tries to make some of the jokes he's already used to us, taking advantage of his vocal skills... but he doesn't have the material or time and what he does has no freshness or novelty. Sir Christopher Lee makes a brief appearance in the film, and as far as I can understand, he did so as a favor to the producer. Friendship is a beautiful thing, and also professional courtesy, but I bet Lee won't want to be remembered for this movie (and he certainly won't, he's done better things, as we know). Who ends up standing out in some way is Ron Perlman. The actor, who we know for other, much more dignified works, tried to be funny and give some dignity to his character. Meritorious, respectable, but unworthy of the actor he is. The rest of the cast is not worth mentioning. Are there any redeeming qualities in this film? To be honest, I don't think so..., but even so, I feel obliged to make a small caveat: I liked the fact that they did a lot of the filming in the real city of Moscow and that they used real Russian extras and Russian speakers. This gives the film a certain authenticity that deserves to be highlighted, and which is most lacking nowadays, where any piece of green or blue screen replaces a real set and saves a few dollars on the production budget. However, it must have taken courage and some dose of madness to try to make a film in the midst of the political and military upheavals Russia was experiencing in those years.

r96sk

<em>'Police Academy: Mission to Moscow'</em> brings this franchise - as it stands - to a close. It's not good, but it's not the worst of the series in my opinion; not that it's far off being so, more the case that I 'enjoyed' it a tiny bit more than the sixth entry. The cast feels bare-bones, at least in terms of the original bunch of characters. Bubba Smith dropped out for this, which is a loss, so only Michael Winslow, David Graf and George Gaynes stayed to complete the run of appearing in all seven films. It's actually away from them that you find the interesting performers, as Christopher Lee and Ron Perlman turn up. The former doesn't feature heavily, though the latter does and is alright I guess; as noted already, he is better than last time out's attempt. On the cast, the film has a crafted sequence at the end where it gives special mention to the key performers... via horse riding, no less. Given the obvious cuts to 'hide' the stunt performers, I'm surprised they went to so much effort for a short moment like that - must've had budget left over! I'm rather glad to have completed this franchise. Despite that and that none of these flicks scored positively, I actually didn't mind watching them. I might be being generous, but honestly they are relatively simple to watch; the filmmakers had the common sense to limit 'em to 80-90 minutes, which most certainly helps!