Mac, the two-fisted, savvy cop finds that he's being saddled with a new partner, a known burnout, to work with him on a new and difficult case. The new partner is Ellis, an amazing detective, one who puts Sherlock Holmes to shame with his lightning-fast deductions. But he keeps assuming the personalities of entire casts of Television shows. This can be a problem when people begin shooting at them.
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That was an excellent one.
Load of rubbish!!
It's funny watching the elements come together in this complicated scam. On one hand, the set-up isn't quite as complex as it seems, but there's an easy sense of fun in every exchange.
A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.
Some movies you want to see just because you want to see how bad they are and that is the reason why I wanted to see "Loose Cannons". This movie was strange as a comedy because the jokes just weren't funny. Also as a cop-buddy movie it doesn't work due to the chemistry between it's lead actors. Gene Hackman and Dan Aykroyd play off each other like two actors who needed the money. The premise was oddly interesting which concerned a piece of Hitler memorabilia and Aykroyd as a schizo cop trying to come to grips with his demons (aka his other personalities). What could have been an inspiring premise for something unique and twisted in the cop-buddy genre instead gets bogged down by generic action sequences, lame jokes and slapdash direction.
This is a great movie. Generally I find American Comedies dull, but this is seriously great. The wit is very clever: my favourite being the license for sex, and some of the slapstick is quite amusing. The plot is not deep but the movie is what I call a fun movie.The movie stars Gene Hackman, who plays far better bad guys that good guys, though in this movie he was good. Then there is Dan Ackroyd who simply steals the show with his antics. Ackroyd is a very good actor as he can take on different roles. Early in his career he seemed to play simply comic roles, such as the Blues Brothers, but recently he has taken a little more serious approach to his roles, such as the assassin in Grosse Point Blanc. Loose Cannons has him playing a cop with multiple personalities, and some of them, such as the Road Runner, are a hoot.As for attitudes, I guess it deals mainly with tolerance for those who are mentally disabled. Ackroyd's character is disabled due to a painful experience in the past, and Hackman puts in effort to actually help Ackroyd return to his job and overcome his experience. It played a little part of the film, but not much. Moreso it was an action/comedy flick.The one thing that concerned me was that the title had little to do with the movie. A loose cannon is somebody who does not take part in the team, somebody who is not under control and goes about doing their own thing. Obviously it comes from the times of wooden sailing ships in that if a cannon was not secure, it could roll all over the ship and possibly cause quite a lot of damage. These guys did not seem to be loose cannons, rather they were involved in a case and were doing what they could to solve it. There was no big police cover up and their superiors were not ordering them to desist from the case. Other than that, which is minor, but I tend to drag up minor things, it was a good movie.
The plot description sounds hilarious: It's about a schizophrenic (Dan Aykroyd) who drives his policeman partner (Gene Hackman) crazy because he has like twenty different personalities from various television shows. However, the different personalities took up very little of the movie; most of it was about how emotionally disturbed Aykroyd is by his schizophrenism (is that a word?). The plot beyond Aykroyd's delusions is forgettable - in fact, I forgot about it already (I think it had something to do with a crime). Do not waste your time with this unfunny piece of trash. And I'm only saying "trash" because the comment guidelines say no profanity.
Loose Cannons is a horrible combination of detective thriller and black comedy. Hackman and Aykroyd are wasted (and probably eternally incompatible) talents in a movie that should never have been made. A detective doing cartoon character impersonations join Mossad agents in a chase after a Nazi porn film showing Hitler committing suicide. The plot has all the makings of an Austin Powers spoof - a possibility that is sadly never explored in a film taking itself much, much too seriously.