| Two salesmen trash a company truck on an energy drink-fueled bender. Upon their arrest, the court gives them a choice: do hard time or spend 150 service hours with a mentorship program. After one day with the kids, however, jail doesn't look half bad. |
| Two salesmen trash a company truck on an energy drink-fueled bender. Upon their arrest, the court gives them a choice: do hard time or spend 150 service hours with a mentorship program. After one day with the kids, however, jail doesn't look half bad. |
| When a desperate movie producer fails to get a major star for his bargain basement film, he decides to shoot the film secretly around him. |
| In 1932, two strangers are wrongfully convicted and develop a strong friendship in prison that lasts them through the 20th century. |
| Code of Silence (1985)[brak katalogu] Action / Crime / Drama / ThrillerAndrew Davis Michael Butler / Dennis Shryack / Mike Gray / John Mason A Chicago cop is caught in the middle of a gang war while his own comrades shun him because he wants to take down an irresponsible cop. |
| A spoof of buddy cop movies where two very different cops are forced to team up on a new reality based television cop show, while tracking down the manufacturer and distributor of an illegally made semi-automatic firearm. |
| Wild behavior forces a pair of energy drink reps to enroll in a Big Brother program. |
| Showtime (2002)[uszkodzony] LAPD Detective Sergeant Mitch Preston cares only about doing his job and nailing crooks. LAPD Patrol Officer Trey Sellars joined the force as a day job until his acting career took off. During an undercover drug buy Mitch was working that Trey botched by calling in for backup and drawing media attention, Mitch's partner is shot with a very exotic 12-gauge automatic weapon; Mitch then shoots the video camera out of the hands of a reporter filming the action when the cameraman refused to shut it down. Faced with a $10 million lawsuit, the department agrees to let producer Chase Renzi film Mitch's investigation for a new reality TV show, and constantly tries to make everything more "viewer friendly" by changing everything about Mitch's life to fit the stereotypical view of police officers--and partners him with Trey. |