

48 Hrs.

A hard-nosed cop reluctantly teams up with a wise-cracking criminal temporarily paroled to him, in order to track down a killer.
A hard-nosed cop reluctantly teams up with a wise-cracking criminal temporarily paroled to him, in order to track down a killer.
Theres a new Sheriff in town and his names Reggie Hammond
I miss the gritty Dirty Harry like violence these days. Dirty Harry is what it is pretty much before Murphy shows up to add laughs.
A good solidly entertaining classic 1980s cop-buddy movie. The movie lives from the performances of Nolte and Murphy as well as of the chemistry between them. Just good entertainment that still works.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ - You know, the generosity of women never ceases to amaze me - Reggie
Here's how my rating system works:
10❤- Masterpiece 💯
9❤- Excellent
8❤ - Amazing 👌
7❤- Great 🌞
6❤ - Good 👍
5❤ - Average 🤕
4❤ - Bad but watchable :octagonal_sign:
3❤ - Bad 😭
2❤- Awful :face_vomiting:
1❤ - Bull Shit
Decent cop buddy comedy action. Clash of personalities provides the entertainment. The actors make it work. It's fun.
A reasonable film, with a simple story and action scenes that can be considered average by today's standards. It can be said that the film has aged a little compared to what is expected nowadays.
A stereotypical ‘80s buddy-cop type film, 48 HRS. is poorly made and overly contrived. In order to find an escaped prisoner named Ganz, detective Jack Cates gets one of Ganz’s former gang members out of prison on a 48 hour pass to help him find him. Nick Nolte is terrible, and angry acts in every scene. Eddie Murphy however, is pretty good and injects some much needed humor. The action is fairly well-done, though nothing too impressive or memorable. Dark and gritty, 48 HRS. tries to distinguish itself within the cop genre but ends up being typical B-grade schlock.
A convict and a policeman have to collaborate forcibly.
Theres a new Sheriff in town and his names Reggie Hammond