The Heat (2013)

£0.00


Country: US/GB
Technical: col/2.35:1 117m
Director: Paul Feig
Cast: Sandra Bullock, Melissa McCarthy, Demián Bichir

Synopsis:

An uptight, know-it-all FBI agent is seconded to a Boston drugs case and has to work with a foulmouthed female cop who is her sartorial and procedural opposite. She learns humility and how to be a badass, whereas the cop carries on treating citizens like shit as before.

Review:

Lazily written, profane buddy-cop movie of the kind they were making forty years ago and Neil Simon inaugurated with The Odd Couple. It shambles its way from one bust to the next, pausing long enough for its antagonists to tear up and open up in an oh-so feminine way, which is after all its chief selling point (as opposed to 'unique' - Cagney & Lacey, anyone?)

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Country: US/GB
Technical: col/2.35:1 117m
Director: Paul Feig
Cast: Sandra Bullock, Melissa McCarthy, Demián Bichir

Synopsis:

An uptight, know-it-all FBI agent is seconded to a Boston drugs case and has to work with a foulmouthed female cop who is her sartorial and procedural opposite. She learns humility and how to be a badass, whereas the cop carries on treating citizens like shit as before.

Review:

Lazily written, profane buddy-cop movie of the kind they were making forty years ago and Neil Simon inaugurated with The Odd Couple. It shambles its way from one bust to the next, pausing long enough for its antagonists to tear up and open up in an oh-so feminine way, which is after all its chief selling point (as opposed to 'unique' - Cagney & Lacey, anyone?)


Country: US/GB
Technical: col/2.35:1 117m
Director: Paul Feig
Cast: Sandra Bullock, Melissa McCarthy, Demián Bichir

Synopsis:

An uptight, know-it-all FBI agent is seconded to a Boston drugs case and has to work with a foulmouthed female cop who is her sartorial and procedural opposite. She learns humility and how to be a badass, whereas the cop carries on treating citizens like shit as before.

Review:

Lazily written, profane buddy-cop movie of the kind they were making forty years ago and Neil Simon inaugurated with The Odd Couple. It shambles its way from one bust to the next, pausing long enough for its antagonists to tear up and open up in an oh-so feminine way, which is after all its chief selling point (as opposed to 'unique' - Cagney & Lacey, anyone?)