Police Academy 3- Back In Traininghd Now
So, stand up straight, polish your whistle, and prepare for a "classic example of blue-collar, trial-and-error, non-violent police work."
Now available in a crisp, high-definition transfer that makes every pratfall and every sweat-stained uniform of Captain Harris pop like never before, Back in Training deserves a second look. Why? Because it is the only sequel that understood the assignment: The Plot: Budget Cuts and Belly Flops The premise is deceptively simple—and brilliant. Governor Neilson (the late, great Ed Nelson) needs to cut costs. He announces that one of the state’s two police academies must close. On one side, you have Commandant Lassard (George Gaynes), the gentle, pigeon-loving father figure whose academy produces lovable misfits. On the other, you have Commandant Mauser (the sneeringly hilarious Art Metrano), whose academy produces… well, fascists in tight shorts. Police Academy 3- Back in TrainingHD
The "HD" in the title is a promise: Back in Training looks cleaner, sounds louder, and plays faster than you remember. It is a time capsule from an era when a movie about clumsy cops could be the fourth highest-grossing film of the year. So, stand up straight, polish your whistle, and
The solution? A "competitive evaluation." Both academies are ordered to take on a new batch of recruits. The best graduates win; the losers get shut down. Governor Neilson (the late, great Ed Nelson) needs
In the sprawling, often maligned, yet strangely beloved franchise of Police Academy , there is a commonly held belief: the first film is the classic, the second is the weird hangover, and Citizen’s Arrest (Part 4) is where the wheels officially fell off. But sandwiched right in the middle, existing in a perfect pocket of goofball confidence, is .
By Staff Writer