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Eddie Murphy | Officer Trey Sellars | |
Robert De Niro | Det. Mitch Preston | |
Rene Russo | ||
William Shatner | ||
Frankie Faison | ||
Rachael Harris | Teacher | |
Zaid Farid | Police Captain Ben | |
Alex Borstein | Casting Director | |
Holly Mandel | Producer | |
Marshall Manesh | Convenience Store Owner | |
Nestor Serrano | Ray | |
T.J. Cross | ReRun | |
Mos Def | Lazy Boy | |
Rachel Harris | Teacher | |
T. J. Cross | ReRun | |
James Roday | Cameraman | |
Joel Hurt Jones | Reporter | |
Chris Harrison | Reporter | |
Perri Peltz | Reporter | |
Amy Powell | Reporter |
Director |
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Producer | Jane Rosenthal
Jorge Saralegui Bruce Berman Channing Dungey James Lassiter |
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Writer | Miles Millar
Alfred Gouch Jorge Saralegui Keith Sharon Alfred Gough |
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Cinematography | Thomas Kloss
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Musician | Alan Silvestri
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Lights. Camera. Aggravation. Showtime is fun time, an action/comedy tale of mismatched LAPD partners (Robert De Niro and Eddie Murphy) directed by Tom Dey (Shanghai Noon). De Niro, wearing a slow-burn scowl like a badge, plays Mitch, a cop's cop forced by his superiors to be the focus of a reality TV series. Murphy plays Trey, a camera-ready officer more eager to hit his mark than hit the streets. Backed by a ratings-obsessed producer (Rene Russo) and coached in the finer points of copdom by a veteran star (William Shatner, spoofing his T.J. Hooker), Mitch and Trey become America's favorite buddy cops. But reel life soon gives way to the real. A brutal crimelord must be stopped - and that's where the shrapnel hits the fan. |
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Features
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