Chase and August are ambushed while providing routine transit protection for Cecil, who is supposed to testify against the mob.Chase and August are ambushed while providing routine transit protection for Cecil, who is supposed to testify against the mob.Chase and August are ambushed while providing routine transit protection for Cecil, who is supposed to testify against the mob.
Photos
Dawn Eason
- Jodi
- (as Dawn Radenbaugh)
Renee Tenison
- Kendra Brooks
- (as Reneé Tenison)
Thomas Rosales Jr.
- Bandit
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- GoofsKnowing they're being pursued by a slew of thugs, and that a leak in the department is increasing their risk of being found, it's unthinkable that two cops with the witness they're protecting would sit curbside at a restaurant, rather than some place less visible and vulnerable.
Featured review
And Pesci too! (Or should that be Pesci 2?)
This series is shameless. Not content with brazenly copying Lethal Weapon's premise of older, stable, black cop and younger, reckless, white cop, this episode also features the most blatant rip-off of Joe Pesci's comic relief character. Cecil Rusk is an absolute carbon copy of Leo Getz.
That said, Rusk is entertaining and the episode is fun. In fact, I've enjoyed all three episodes so far, even if the second was a bit clichéd and predictable with its race storyline. Steven Williams (who most viewers will remember from The X Files) and Wolf Larson make for a charismatic and very likeable pair of leads. Each also has a knockout wife/girlfriend. Nice.
Speaking of which, I had to laugh at the scene where the guys go to a restaurant and, as the waitress walks from the counter to their table, we follow her derrière in close-up all the way. As I said, shameless! And Pesci too! (Or should that be Pesci 2?) After This series is shameless. Not content with brazenly copying Lethal Weapon's premise of older, stable, black cop and younger, reckless, white cop, this episode also features the most blatant rip-off of Joe Pesci's comic relief character. Cecil Rusk is an absolute carbon copy of Leo Getz.
That said, Rusk is entertaining and the episode is fun. In fact, I've enjoyed all three episodes so far, even if the second was a bit clichéd and predictable with its race storyline. Steven Williams (who most viewers will remember from The X Files) and Wolf Larson make for a charismatic and very likeable pair of leads. Each also has an absolute knockout of a wife/girlfriend, which totally helps in the domestic scenes. Speaking of knockouts, no less a personage than Sugar Ray freakin' Leonard is also randomly along for the ride! Good, good stuff.
I did have to laugh at the scene in this episode where the guys go to a restaurant and, as the waitress makes her way from the counter to their table, we follow not her but her derrière in close-up all the way. Like I said, shameless!
That said, Rusk is entertaining and the episode is fun. In fact, I've enjoyed all three episodes so far, even if the second was a bit clichéd and predictable with its race storyline. Steven Williams (who most viewers will remember from The X Files) and Wolf Larson make for a charismatic and very likeable pair of leads. Each also has a knockout wife/girlfriend. Nice.
Speaking of which, I had to laugh at the scene where the guys go to a restaurant and, as the waitress walks from the counter to their table, we follow her derrière in close-up all the way. As I said, shameless! And Pesci too! (Or should that be Pesci 2?) After This series is shameless. Not content with brazenly copying Lethal Weapon's premise of older, stable, black cop and younger, reckless, white cop, this episode also features the most blatant rip-off of Joe Pesci's comic relief character. Cecil Rusk is an absolute carbon copy of Leo Getz.
That said, Rusk is entertaining and the episode is fun. In fact, I've enjoyed all three episodes so far, even if the second was a bit clichéd and predictable with its race storyline. Steven Williams (who most viewers will remember from The X Files) and Wolf Larson make for a charismatic and very likeable pair of leads. Each also has an absolute knockout of a wife/girlfriend, which totally helps in the domestic scenes. Speaking of knockouts, no less a personage than Sugar Ray freakin' Leonard is also randomly along for the ride! Good, good stuff.
I did have to laugh at the scene in this episode where the guys go to a restaurant and, as the waitress makes her way from the counter to their table, we follow not her but her derrière in close-up all the way. Like I said, shameless!
- feindlicheubernahme
- Jun 2, 2024
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime49 minutes
- Color
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