The Naked Gun - From The Files Of Police Squad-... Jun 2026
Six years later, the creators got their revenge on the big screen. By taking the DNA of the TV show—the literal interpretations of metaphors and the background sight gags—and applying a Hollywood budget, they created a comedy juggernaut. 🎭 The Leslie Nielsen Transformation
The Naked Gun 2 1/2: The Smell of Fear was released in 1991, and it follows Detective Drebin as he investigates a plot to destroy the world's largest diamond. The sequel was also a commercial success, grossing over $39 million at the box office.
From the infamous "magnetic suit" scene to the sprawling baseball climax, Nielsen’s commitment to the bit was absolute. The Naked Gun - From The Files Of Police Squad-...
One barrel tips. Rolls. Knocks over a forklift. The forklift honks, spins, and smashes into a shipping container, which falls open to reveal…
The Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult was released in 1994, and it follows Detective Drebin as he investigates a plot to kill the Pope. The film was not as well-received as the first two installments, but it still maintains a loyal fan base. Six years later, the creators got their revenge
Vex snarls. She leaps onto a jet ski. Frank tries to follow, but his foot gets stuck in a mooring rope. He’s dragged face-first through the harbor, past a wedding barge, under a drawbridge, and finally deposited onto a beach where a children’s puppet show is in progress.
The Naked Gun: License to Slip
While the movie follows a plot—Drebin must stop an assassination attempt on Queen Elizabeth II by a hypnotized henchman—the story is really just a clothesline for gags. Iconic Sequences
Yet, like a stubborn weed of genius, Police Squad! refused to die. It found a second life in the midnight movie circuit and on VHS. Paramount Pictures took a gamble. The mandate was simple: take the character of Frank Drebin, stretch him to feature length, and give him a "case" worthy of his incompetence. The result was —a title so lovingly clunky it immediately signals that you are entering a world of bureaucratic absurdity. The sequel was also a commercial success, grossing
Modern parody films (think the Scary Movie sequels or the Disaster Movie franchise) rely on reference humor. They point at a pop culture moment and say, “Remember this? That’s funny.”
Leslie Nielsen was not a comedian; he was a dramatic actor (see Forbidden Planet ). That is the secret. When Drebin walks through a crime scene, stepping over a corpse to pour himself a glass of milk, Nielsen plays it with the gravity of a Shakespearean soliloquy. The joke isn't the slapstick; it's that Frank genuinely doesn't see the problem.