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Another 48 Hrs.

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Another 48 Hrs.
Theatrical release poster
Directed byWalter Hill
Screenplay byJohn Fasano
Jeb Stuart
Larry Gross
Story byEddie Murphy (credited as "Fred Braughton")
Produced byLawrence Gordon
Robert D. Wachs
StarringEddie Murphy
Nick Nolte
CinematographyMatthew F. Leonetti
Edited byDonn Aron
Carmel Davies
Freeman A. Davies
Tim Ryder
Music byJames Horner
Production
company
Eddie Murphy Productions
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • June 8, 1990 (1990-06-08)
Running time
93 minutes
118 minutes (director's cut)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$38,000,000
Box office$153,518,974 (worldwide)[1]
1,460,259 admissions (France)[2]

Another 48 Hrs. is a 1990 action-crime comedy film,[3] directed by Walter Hill and stars Eddie Murphy, Nick Nolte, Brion James, Andrew Divoff, and Ed O'Ross. It is the sequel to the 1982 film 48 Hrs. In the film, Nolte reprises his role as San Francisco police officer Jack Cates, who has 48 hours to clear his name from a potential manslaughter charge. To do so, he needs the help of Reggie Hammond (Murphy), Cates's friend who is now a newly released convict. At the same time, a notorious mastermind known only as the Iceman has hired a gang of bikers to kill Reggie.

Plot

San Francisco cop Jack Cates is at the Hunter's Point Raceway checking out a known associate of the Iceman, Tyrone Burroughs, who for unknown reasons is giving some money to mechanic Arthur Brock.

Among those who show up at the scene are fellow cops Ben Kehoe and Frank Cruise, and also Blake Wilson, the head of the Internal Affairs division. Cates tells Wilson that he shot Brock in self-defense as Brock had opened fire on him. Cruise picks up a burnt piece of twisted metal but says that he can't find Brock's gun. Cates, however finds a partly burnt picture of Reggie Hammond in Brock's bag.

Cates then goes to visit Reggie in prison, with Reggie due for release in 24 hours. After getting hit in the face with a basketball by Reggie for refusing to promise Reggie his $500,000 unless Reggie helps him find the Ice Man, Jack discovers that Wilson plans to prosecute him on a charge of third degree manslaughter for the Arthur Brock shooting, with Wilson claiming that it was not self-defence and Jack is placed on suspension. Wilson also doesn't believe that the Iceman exists and believes Cates is wasting department resources looking for him.

After Reggie is released from prison, bikers Richard "Cherry" Ganz, the brother of Albert Ganz, and Willie Hickok from The Brotherhood who had earlier killed two highway patrol officers and a bartender at a bar out in the desert, pull up beside the prison bus and open fire on Reggie, causing the bus to crash. Ganz and Hickok then pull up to a diner where Ganz shoots Cates who is sitting inside. Cates and Reggie end up at the same hospital where it is revealed that Cates was wearing a bullet proof vest and Reggie had escaped the hit with nothing more than a bump on his head. Cates then convinces the attending police officers to release Reggie into his custody by telling them that he is needed to identify the Kingpin of a child pornography ring.

After arriving back in San Francisco, Jack and Reggie go to a bar, the bartender having called the police complaining about some bikers, again revealed to be Ganz, Hickok and the leader of The Brotherhood Malcolm Price. While Reggie is in the women's bathroom getting another patron's wallet back from a pick-pocket who tries unsuccessfully to stab him, Cates ends up in a bar fight with a man that he put in prison two years ago, and when Jack loses the advantage and starts getting beaten up, Reggie returns and asks the bartender if she has a gun and saves Jack by shooting one of the assailants in the left kneecap.

Reggie then tells Cates that if he wants to find the Iceman he needs to go back to prison to talk to a man named Kirkland Smith who had not only kept Reggie alive while inside, but knows everything that goes on. Smith tells Jack and Reggie that Malcolm Price is staying at the Sunset Motel on the beltway, then angrily tells Reggie to repay his debt to him before breaking the dividing glass with a single punch. However, before Cates and Reggie can get to the motel, the Iceman shows up and kills Malcolm by shooting Malcolm 16 times. Cherry Ganz and Hickok then visit Tyrone Burroughs and kill him as a warning to the Iceman that there is a heavy price for killing one of The Brotherhood.

Later that same day, Jack, who now thinks that he may never clear his name and find the Iceman, starts emptying his locker at the police station, and finally gives Reggie his money. That night, while Reggie is giving the money that he owes Kirkland Smith to his daughter Amy Smith, Cherry and Willie kidnap Reggie and Amy, and take them to the Bird Cage Club, where they meet with Cruise to receive a payoff for handing Reggie over to him (as retribution for killing one of their own). Cruise orders Cherry and Willie to kill Reggie and Amy, but then Jack shows up. Reggie then identifies the Iceman as Cate's friend Detective Ben Kehoe.

Jack realizes that Kehoe had Cruise pick up Brock's gun at the track because Kehoe wanted Jack out of the way. This leads to a wild shootout that takes place in the Bird Cage club, with all but Cates and Amy Smith being shot or killed. Reggie punches Cherry who falls out of the third floor window. Reggie is then taken hostage by Kehoe. Cates shoots Reggie in the shoulder after Reggie bluffs that Cates should shoot him (as in the first movie). When a surprised Reggie falls, Cates then kills Kehoe.

While Reggie is being loaded onto the ambulance, Jack tells him that he found $500,000 that the Iceman was going to use to pay off the Brotherhood. As the ambulance leaves with Reggie, Jack realizes that Reggie has successfully stolen his lighter.

Cast

Production

Eddie Murphy received a salary of $9,000,000 for his role as Reggie Hammond (because of his success in Beverly Hills Cop and later films), an improvement over his $450,000 salary from the first film. Nick Nolte received a salary of $3,000,000, an improvement over his original salary of $1,000,000 for the first film.

Release

Original workprint of the movie was 145 minutes long. It was cut by either director Walter Hill or the Paramount studio down to 120 minutes, and a week before its summer theatrical release an additional 25 minutes were cut out by Paramount, making a final theatrical version 95 minutes long. Frank McRae's reprisal of his role from the original 48 Hrs. was entirely cut except for a brief, uncredited shot of him in the background of one scene in the police station. Brion James, also returning from the original, saw his role severely cut down as well, to create a faster-paced action-comedy.[4] Also removed was a scene which was partially shown in the theatrical trailer in which Jack explains to Reggie that he has a deadline to track down the Iceman; as such, there is no mention of '48 hours' anywhere in the final film.

As of January 2012, there are no plans to release a director's cut of this film.

Reception

The film grossed more at the US box office than its predecessor and made $72.7 million from foreign markets for a total of $153.5 million.[1][5]

However, critical reception was very negative, and it currently holds a 15% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 27 reviews. Vincent Canby of The New York Times stated that it was "as much a star vehicle for Mr. Murphy as The Gorgeous Hussy once was for Joan Crawford. The Crawford name isn't idly invoked. You have to go back to the old M-G-M days to find movies that, with every gesture, let the audience know it was watching a star." Canby continued, "Though the body count is high, all of the people killed are faceless or only minor characters, until the end. It's as if the movie were saying that lethal violence is acceptable (and fun) as long as the victims - like the victims of guided missiles and high-altitude bombing - remain anonymous. Any comedy that allows the mind to ponder high-altitude bombing is in deep trouble."[6]

Los Angeles Times critic Peter Rainer also gave a negative review, calling it "a crude rehashing of the high points of the first film" and singling out director Hill, who he said "surely recognizes the hollowness of what he's doing here. He tries to ram through the muddled exposition as quickly as possible; essentially, the film is wall-to-wall mayhem, with more shots of hurled bodies shattering windows than I've ever seen in a movie."[7]

Soundtrack

Untitled
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [8]
  1. "The Boys Are Back In Town" - Jesse Johnson 4:01
  2. "Give It All You Got" - Curio 4:37
  3. "I Just Can't Let It End" - Curio 3:52
  4. Another 48 Hrs., film score~The Courthouse - James Horner 3:18
  5. Another 48 Hrs., film score~Main Title - James Horner 4:11
  6. Another 48 Hrs., film score~King Mei Shootout - James Horner 7:36
  7. Another 48 Hrs., film score~Birdcage Battle - James Horner 4:43
  8. I'll Never Get You Out of This World Alive - Michael Stanton[disambiguation needed] 2:25

The original version of "The Boys Are Back in Town" by The Busboys was not on the soundtrack, but played at the end of the film.

The song 'Drinking Them Beers', by the country music singer Tompall Glaser also appears in the movie during the time that Nick Nolte's character is in the diner at the beginning of the film. This song is also not on the official soundtrack of the film.

References

  1. ^ a b "Another 48 HRS. (1990)". Box Office Mojo. 1990-08-14. Retrieved 2012-06-09.
  2. ^ Box office figures for Walter Hill films in France at Box Office Story
  3. ^ Erickson, Hal. "Another 48 Hrs". Allmovie. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved July 26, 2013.
  4. ^ "Brion James - Interview". Reocities.com. Retrieved 2012-06-09.
  5. ^ Broeske, Pat H. (1990-06-11). "48 HRS' Fails to Top 'Total' Ticket Sales". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-12-25.
  6. ^ "Review/Film;For Murphy And Nolte, A Sequel". The New York Times. Retrieved 2012-05-31.
  7. ^ "MOVIE REVIEW : Another 95 Minutes : Sequel: 'Another 48 HRS.,' a crude rehashing of the 1982 hit, reteams Eddie Murphy and Nick Nolte in wall-to-wall mayhem". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-05-31.
  8. ^ Another 48 Hrs. at AllMusic