Dragnet (1987 film)
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Dragnet | |
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Directed by | Tom Mankiewicz |
Produced by | Bernie Brillstein David Permut Robert K. Weiss |
Written by | Jack Webb Dan Aykroyd Alan Zweibel Tom Mankiewicz |
Starring | Dan Aykroyd Tom Hanks Christopher Plummer Harry Morgan Alexandra Paul and Dabney Coleman |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Running time | 106 min. |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
Dragnet is a 1987 film starring Dan Aykroyd, Tom Hanks, Christopher Plummer, Dabney Coleman, Harry Morgan, and Alexandra Paul. Acting as both a parody and homage to the long-running Dragnet television series, Aykroyd plays a very-accurate Joe Friday while Hanks plays Pep Streebeck, his brand-new and very unconventional partner. Harry Morgan reprises his role of Bill Gannon (partner of Joe Jr.'s late uncle), now their captain. Alexandra Paul plays The Virgin Connie Swail while Plummer plays the villain, a soft-spoken "priest" who manages to get under Friday Jr.'s skin. Coleman plays the publisher of a skin magazine called Bait; his character is a direct parody of Hugh Hefner.
As did the original TV series, the movie begins with Sergeant Friday's voice-over narration about Los Angeles and (nearly) ends with a mug shot of the villain and a stern voice-over describing the sentencing.
The title credits featured an update to the series original theme by the British beatbox sample group The Art Of Noise. They set the Dragnet theme against a hip-hop style breakbeat with soundbites such as Friday's "Just the facts, ma'am" timed to the music.
The soundtrack is also notable for one of its original songs, "City of Crime." The track features a hip-hop style collaboration between Dan Aykroyd and Tom Hanks, and played over the film's closing credits. There was also a music video shot for the track, which was played in heavy rotation on MTV in the summer of 1987.
[edit] External links
- Dragnet at the Internet Movie Database