| Front Cover |
Actor |
Back Cover |
|
| Mel Gibson |
Martin Riggs
|
| Danny Glover |
Roger Murtaugh
|
| Joe Pesci |
Leo Getz
|
| Rene Russo |
Lorna Cole
|
| Stuart Wilson (II) |
|
| Steve Kahan |
Captain Ed Murphy
|
| Darlene Love |
|
| Traci Wolfe |
|
| Damon Hines |
Nick Murtaugh
|
| Ebonie Smith |
|
| Stuart Wilson |
Jack Travis
|
| Gregory Millar |
Tyrone
|
| Nick Chinlund |
Hatchett
|
| Alan Scarfe |
Herman Walters
|
|
|
|
| Movie Details |
| Genre |
Comedy; Crime; Action |
| Director |
Richard Donner |
| Producer |
Richard Donner; Joel Silver |
| Writer |
Robert Mark Kamen; Shane Black |
| Cinematography |
Jan de Bont |
| Musician |
|
| Studio |
Warner Bros. |
|
| Language |
English |
| Audience Rating |
Unrated |
| Running Time |
121 |
| Country |
USA |
| Color |
Color |
|
| Plot |
| The lightest of the first three films, Lethal Weapon 3 finds everyone occupying comfortable positions like students who always choose to sit in the same classroom seats. Mel Gibson and Danny Glover return as LAPD partners whose working method consists of the former diving into danger and the latter holding back. (The sequence set in the parking garage of a building, in which Gibson inadvertently trips a switch that makes a timed explosive device speed up, is priceless.) Joe Pesci once again plays a motor-mouth pest, and while the story is pretty much forgettable, it does introduce the best new dynamic in the series, a romance between Gibson and Rene Russo's equally tough but attractive cop. --Tom Keogh |
|
|
| Edition Details |
| Edition |
Director's Cut |
| Format |
DVD |
| Region |
Region 1 |
| Screen Ratio |
2.35:1 |
| Layers |
Single Side, Dual Layer |
| Barcode |
085391629122 |
| Release Date |
6/6/2000 |
| Subtitles |
English; French; Spanish |
| Packaging |
Snap Case |
| Audio Tracks |
English Dolby Digital 5.1
French Dolby Digital 5.1 |
| No. of Disks/Tapes |
1 |
|
|
Extra Features
|
| Interactive Menus Theatrical Trailer Scene Access |
|