"Police Squad!" Ring of Fear (A Dangerous Assignment) (TV Episode 1982) Poster

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8/10
25 minutes of good, solid laughs.
Hey_Sweden16 February 2012
It really is a truth about 'Police Squad': one HAD to actually WATCH the show, and pay attention, in order to notice all of the detail in shots. It took a Mad Magazine approach to its satire so people could miss something good if they weren't watching.

In this riotous second episode, dedicated dumbbell Frank Drebin is on the case of mobsters who make it a practice to pay boxers to throw matches. Drebins' scheme will be to purchase the contract to a crooked boxer, in this case, Buddy Briggs (Patrick St. Esprit), and get him to fight the reigning champ (Grand L. Bush) in a clean manner. But the mobsters have got it all figured out, kidnapping Buddy's girlfriend Mary (super sexy Tessa Richarde) and ordering him to lose for Mary's sake. It's up to Drebin to find and save Mary before the fight is over.

The usual high quotient of successful verbal and visual jokes is on full display for this hilarious, charming series that had a high old time spoofing the old detective shows. Leslie Nielsen is in fine wacky form as Drebin, and nicely supported by Alan North as his superior Ed Hocken. Dr. Olson (Ed Williams) and Johnny the amazingly knowledgeable shoeshine guy (William Duell) continue to have their hysterical moments as well. Delivering funny supporting performances are Floyd Levine as crooked manager Cooper, Irwin Keyes as Luca the thug, and Rudy Solari as Martin the mobster. Extremely prolific stuntman and character actor Thomas Rosales Jr. and future 'Sopranos' regular Tony Sirico make uncredited appearances; Georg Stanford Brown (who directed the next episode) fulfils the 'guest star who dies horribly' requirement.

Inspired jokes include the "Kramer vs. Kramer" title on a boxing marquee, a boxer punching out his own shadow, and Rosales Jr.'s character having a fake beat-up chin applied to his face after a round. In the directors' chair is Joe Dante, who would also direct the sixth and unfortunately final episode.

Eight out of 10.
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8/10
Funny episode
Woodyanders6 September 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Blundering detective Frank Drebin (Leslie Nielsen in fine deadpan form) makes a contract with boxer Buddy (a solid and likable turn by Patrick St. Esprit) in order to infiltrate a nefarious gang that bribes boxers to take a dive during fights. The gang abducts Buddy's fed-up girlfriend Mary (nicely played by pretty blonde Tessa Richarde), so Frank has to find her before Buddy reneges on his promise. Director Joe Dante, working from a clever script by Tino Insana and Robert Wuhl, relates the enjoyable story at a steady pace and maintains an engagingly loopy tongue-in-cheek tone throughout. Moreover, the cast have a ball with the wacky material, with especially stand-out guest work from Rudy Solari as fearsome bigwig Martin, Floyd Levine as crooked manager Cooper, and Irwin Keyes as menacing thug Luca. William Duell also shines as helpful and ridiculously knowledgeable shoeshine man informant Johnny. Don't blink or you'll miss Gerg Stanford Brown's fleeting appearance as an ill-fated cop who gets killed by having a safe dropped right on him. Of course, there's also plenty of uproarious sight gags that include Buddy punching out his shadow while training for his next match, a marquee announcing an upcoming Kramer Vs. Kramer match, and a boxing announcer being knocked out by a descending microphone. It's the way this show pokes affectionate fun at the endearingly cornball nature of hokey 50's crime programs which in turn makes it so amusing and appealing. A real hoot.
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8/10
It would take me several hours to I.D. all the props in the kitty.
mark.waltz18 September 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Crooked boxing is the game, but Lt. Frank Drebbin is his name, and where there's Drebbin, there's no hope for anybody else. This is a very enjoyable throwback to the film noir classics of the 1940's that dealt with corruption in prize fighting with every archetype from those films present. The strong but dim bulb novice, his equally dim bulb floozy girlfriend, local snitches (series regular William Duell) and a bunch of cliched criminal types who talk tough but can't get anything smart to roll off of their tongue. Shadow boxing leads to a very funny visual as does the man found hanging whose feet keep knocking everybody around. When Nielsen goes to the bar and orders a screwdriver, it's obvious what's going to happen, but there's an even funnier gag to go with it. That scene of course was later revenge for the movies. Guest star George Stanford Brown finds out that life as a police officer isn't always "safe". As usual, the last come fast and furious, and thank God for the rewind button if you realize that you've missed something. However, there are so many items in the kitty in a card game, that indeed, it is difficult to make them all out.
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