The Russian government hires the veterans of the Police Academy (1984) to help deal with the Mafia.The Russian government hires the veterans of the Police Academy (1984) to help deal with the Mafia.The Russian government hires the veterans of the Police Academy (1984) to help deal with the Mafia.
Vladimir Dolinskiy
- Bellboy
- (as Vladimir Dolinsky)
Stuart Nisbet
- Anchor Person
- (as Stuart Nissbet)
Valeriy Yaremenko
- Mikhail
- (as Valery Yaramenko)
Robert Iannaccone
- Training Sergeant
- (as Bob Iannaccone)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAccording to his autobiography, Bubba Smith had initially made a verbal agreement to reprise his role as Hightower, but Marion Ramsey later called Bubba in tears, uncertain as to why she had not been asked to return. Bubba knew Marion was hurting financially, having already given her a small loan not long before. Bubba said he would see what he could do. When Bubba called the producers to ask if Marion could join the cast, he was told that Hooks could not be written into the script. In defense of Marion, Bubba made the decision to withdraw from the movie. In a peculiar case of life imitating art, this situation mirrors the scene in Police Academy (1984), when Hightower is forced to leave the academy after standing up for Hooks.
- Goofs(at around 1 min) In the beginning of the movie, the male reporter plays "The Game" on a GameBoy console with no power and no cartridge. All subsequent consoles shown have cartridges inserted.
- Quotes
Airport P.A. Announcer: The red zone is for communist parking only!
- ConnectionsEdited from Police Academy 5: Assignment: Miami Beach (1988)
Featured review
Imagine having your testicles ripped off by a Grizzly and you're half way to appreciating how painful an experience this movie is. Whatever you thought about the previous Police Academy movies (and I'm not particularly fond of any of them) they at least fitted in to the genre of comedy. This one creates it's own sub-genre: the anti-comedy. There's not a single joke in the entire film that makes any sense, and this is partly due to the fact that the script reads as though it was translated from English into Russian and then back again. And I'm not trying to insult the Russians. They get a hard enough time in the movie. If the makers of this film are to be believed, the Russian people are a humourless bunch, and so you imagine that the producers thought that a film with absolutely no humour in it would go down a storm with Moscow audiences. Now, I've never seen a Russian comedy, but I think it's safe to bet that they're better than this.
In one scene, a character batters a hole in a hotel room door using an ice bucket stuck to his head. I don't know why, and it's typical of this film that you're never quite sure what it is you're supposed to be laughing at. The jokes just rattle on and on like this making no sense whatsoever.
If you were to convince yourself that what you were actually watching was a serious drama about the mental illness of a high-ranking police officer lost in Moscow, you might get some perverse pleasure out of this. On the video packet, though, the distributors assure us that it's a comedy, so you can't even give the film the benefit of the doubt.
It's interesting to note that after the Police Academy team's adventure in Moscow, the authorities saw fit to let them back into their own country, where they went on to make Police Academy : The Series which is, believe it or not, even worse than this.
Best to watch this drunk. And with the television switched off.
In one scene, a character batters a hole in a hotel room door using an ice bucket stuck to his head. I don't know why, and it's typical of this film that you're never quite sure what it is you're supposed to be laughing at. The jokes just rattle on and on like this making no sense whatsoever.
If you were to convince yourself that what you were actually watching was a serious drama about the mental illness of a high-ranking police officer lost in Moscow, you might get some perverse pleasure out of this. On the video packet, though, the distributors assure us that it's a comedy, so you can't even give the film the benefit of the doubt.
It's interesting to note that after the Police Academy team's adventure in Moscow, the authorities saw fit to let them back into their own country, where they went on to make Police Academy : The Series which is, believe it or not, even worse than this.
Best to watch this drunk. And with the television switched off.
- adrian_knott
- Dec 16, 2001
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- How long is Police Academy: Mission to Moscow?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Police Academy 7: Mission to Moscow
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $6,200,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $126,247
- Gross worldwide
- $126,247
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By what name was Police Academy: Mission to Moscow (1994) officially released in India in English?
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