Sentences with phrase «real cops who»

Friedkin cast several real NYPD employees (including the real cops who broke the case, Eddie Egan and Sonny Grasso), vitally shot on location (in Marseilles and Washington D.C. as well as Brooklyn), and hewed closely to his research and the advice of ever - present consultants Egan and Grasso.
Rob Riggle joins them in their adventures as a straight - laced real cop who can't quite make heads or tails of the unlikely duo's partnership

Not exact matches

Two cops arrive to investigate the disturbance and question the six Cimorelli sisters, who happen to be real - life YouTube personalities.
otherwise i would go with the home - birth to avoid legal issues with the doctors / cops / nurses / cps who can get real pushy if they don't like you.
The department's anger at the mayor is real — even among the cops who know he had nothing to do with Saturday's fatal shooting.
I haven't heard if Mayor Mike has recognized the real hero of the day, Lance Orton, 56, who explained it was second nature for him to alert cops when he saw smoke billowing from the back of a suspicious SUV as tourists milled about just yards away.
Want to start meeting single men and women who are real cops?
Game Night has a few going for it — one helluva cast (Jason Bateman, Rachel McAdams, Billy Magnusson, Kyle Chandler, Sharon Horgan, Kylie Bunbury, Jesse Plemons, Danny Huston, Michael C. Hall, Chelsea Peretti, Camille Chen and more); an opening meet cute that is original and clever; the establishment of a weekly get together for a games night; the sad sack neighbor who used to be part of the group (and is also a cop with a cute dog), and, finally, the idea that what starts out as a special murder mystery game night turns out to be the real thing — but no knows it.
Rogen will play Ronnie Barnhardt, an ego - maniacal head of mall security who tangos with with the local cops (you know, the real po - po).
The dark comedy stars Seth Rogen as Ronnie Barnhardt, head of security at the Forest Ridge Mall who dreams of being a real cop.
Kara Hui and real - life martial artist and former Peking Opera student Sharon Yeung Pan-pan are a pair of cops hunting fugitive triad leader Kenneth Tsang, who's come back to Hong Kong from Japan to shake up the underworld, bringing with him a tough and muscular female bodyguard (real - life powerlifting champion and «Girls With Guns» superstar Michiko Nishiwaki).
True stories: Frank Serpico (2017, not rated) profiles the real - life New York cop who inspired the 1973 movie starring Al Pacino and foodie documentary Soul of a Banquet (2014) spotlights Cecilia Chiang, who introduced authentic Chinese food to America in the 1960s.
When a couple called the Triplehorns don't show up, Phil and Claire take their table and, before you know it, this sweet couple find themselves mixed up with crooked cops, a sleazy DA, the real Triplehorns [who really aren't Triplehorns], honest cops and a security expert who has an aversion to shirts [as Phil complains, who needs muscles on top of their shoulders?].
Sylvester Stallone — looking more than a little like a gorilla taught to walk upright — plays a hitman who teams up with a cop (Sung Kang) to take down the New Orleans real estate developers who killed his partner.
Going down with him could be his partner T.I. (who may be a real corrupt cop) while Gabrielle Union just wants Downs to get their son back.
The film stars Jessica Lowndes as a real estate reporter who teams up with a cop to investigate the death of her family.
How this all happens is absolutely fascinating, beginning with the arrival of the FBI and Special Agent Richard DesLauriers (Kevin Bacon), who uses a warehouse to re-create entire city streets and the crime scene; Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis (John Goodman), who runs the show with nerves of steel; Sgt. Jeffrey Pugliese (JK Simmons), the Watertown cop who finds himself in the middle of a shootout with the culprits; Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick (Michael Beach); Dun Meng (an excellent and scene - stealing Jimmy O. Yang), the young Chinese man who was carjacked and kidnapped by the pair, only to turn the tables on them; and of course the Tsarnaev brothers, Tamerlan (Themo Meilikidze) and the younger Dzhokhar (Alex Wolff), who both look and act so eerily like the real thing it is positively chilling to watch them.
With the exception of a couple of bumbling cops who never see any real action, we realize that in this fictional world, only the four main characters can solve the mess they've created, so suspension of disbelief is warranted to properly enjoy it.
As in the previous films, Nolan and his co-writer, his brother Jonathan, draw on real - world issues to spice up the fantasy, and with dubious results: with its rampaging Occupy Gotham anarchists, philanthropic billionaires and decent cops who ignore due process, this is so staunchly right - wing it'll thrill all those Fox News anchors outraged by «The Muppets».
Denzel Washington, as Bobby, and Mark Wahlberg, as Stig — two guys who may or may not be hoods, cops, or crooked cops — are the two real reasons to see the film.
Michael J Fox plays a jaded, spoiled Hollywood megastar who decides the only way to prepare for his forthcoming role as a New York cop in a crummy action film is to hang out with the real thing.
After winning the first award of the evening, Best Supporting Actor, for his portrayal of the racist cop Dixon who butts head with McDormand's equally volatile heroine, Mildred, Rockwell admitted that in real life, both of their characters would've likely been sent to prison.
For the screenplay, he enlisted a real - life cop, Robert Souza, who ironically has a side job of his own as a screenwriter, and together they made a modestly entertaining throwaway thriller.
Washington (the son of Denzel) plays Ron Stallworth, the real - life African American cop who, in 1979, infiltrated the Colorado Springs Ku Klux Klan simply by picking up the phone and spouting racist garbage.
Wide - eyed and whacked out on the funny weed, Doc Sportello (Joaquin Phoenix) is a mind - fried private eye from sunny Southern California trying to make sense of a series of incidents involving, in no particular order: a spacey former girlfriend (Katherine Waterston); a missing real - estate mogul (Eric Roberts); a deceased saxophonist who apparently is not, in fact, deceased (Owen Wilson); a coke - snorting dentist with a libido in overdrive (Martin Short); a porno - parlor proprietress (Hong Chau); a bullying cop with hair cropped in a fearsome flattop (Josh Brolin); a cultlike rehab center; risqué neckties; a big, fat heroin stash; a mysterious sailboat and a torture chamber.
Jamie Bell plays a fellow cop who's a real threat to Bruce's promotion, so he's got a ready supply of blackmail material on the lad.
The article was entitled «Mark of a Murderer,» and detailed the tale of a real - life cop who begins to realize that the primary suspect on the murder investigation he is on is his own son.
There's a bevy of supporting characters — John Goodman's goateed mobster and Pruitt Taylor Vince as a cop sidekick — who don't have any real weight.
Really «The Woodsman» is Bacon's film, but he is more than ably assisted by his co-stars, most notably by Sedgwick who epitomises resilience, by Bratt playing a character every bit as ambiguous as Walter himself, by Mos Def who elevates a stock cop rôle to new levels of melancholic disillusionment, and by Pilkes, whose nuanced turn in the film's most difficult scenes makes her a real talent to watch.
«Date Night» supplies them with the «real» Tripplehorns (James Franco and Mila Kunis), two mob - employed cops (Jimmi Simpson and Common), a mob boss (Ray Liotta) and a muscular security expert (Mark Wahlberg) who never wears a shirt.
The film follows Bronx cop Ralph Sarchie (Bana), a real - life NYPD veteran turned demonologist, who tries his best night after night to clean up the dank and dangerous streets.
The comedy follows two friends who impersonate cops for fun but everything goes wrong when they mess with a real - life mobster.
After all, both movies revolve around a bumbling but dedicated security guard who wants to become a real cop, who still lives at home with his mom and who has a crush on a cute clerk at the shopping mall where he works.
The pair, who reprise their roles as undercover cops Greg Jenko and Morton Schmidt respectively in the comedy sequel, said working together didn't feel laborious because they are such good friends in real life.
The volatile culture of the setting enriches the procedural but it's the partnership of American homicide detective Sonya Cross (Diane Kruger), an obsessive, brilliant, by - the - book cop with borderline Asperger's symptoms, and Chihauhau State Police detective Marco Ruiz (Demian Bichir), a moral cop in an amoral system who latches on to this cross-jurisdictional case because it may allow him to do real police work unencumbered by corrupt bosses, that defines the show.
So Pru sets out to prove Lily's innocence, and she gets tangled up in an investigation that involves a business venture, an aging mother with Alzheimer's, a pregnant fiance, an animal control officer with a pet ferret named Frank, a gay Bichon named Bitsy who tells Pru his real name is Growler, and a handsome cop.
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