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Movie Poster

Sharky's Machine

Police officer Tom Sharky is reassigned to vice duty, where he encounters a scandalous conspiracy involving a local politician. His new 'machine' for collecting evidence becomes a pivotal tool as Sharky falls for a woman he has never met.

Director(s)

Princess O'Mahoney

Cast & Crew

Burt Reynolds

Burt Reynolds

Tom Sharky

Charles Durning

Charles Durning

Lt. Friscoe

Bernie Casey

Bernie Casey

Arch

James O'Connell

James O'Connell

-

Tony King

Tony King

-

Rachel Ward

Rachel Ward

Domino

Val Avery

Val Avery

Manny

Henry Silva

Henry Silva

Billy Score

Richard Libertini

Richard Libertini

Nosh

Brian Keith

Brian Keith

Papa

Bennie Moore

Bennie Moore

-

Joseph Mascolo

Joseph Mascolo

Joe Tipps

Hari Rhodes

Hari Rhodes

-

Carol Locatell

Carol Locatell

Mabel

Vittorio Gassman

Vittorio Gassman

Victor Scorelli

Weaver Levy

Weaver Levy

-

Earl Holliman

Earl Holliman

Donald Hotchkins

Darryl Hickman

Darryl Hickman

Smiley

John Fiedler

John Fiedler

Barrett

Princess O'Mahoney

Princess O'Mahoney

-

Suzee Pai

Suzee Pai

Siakwan

Glynn Rubin

Glynn Rubin

-

Aarika Wells

Aarika Wells

Tiffany

Alveda King

Alveda King

-

Details

GenresCrime, Drama, Action, Thriller
Runtime2h 2 mins
Released on18 Dec 1981
Languageen
Produced InUnited States of America
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Reviews

GenerationofSwine

10/10

It was made in '81 and is actually a pretty solid police film. It's not great, it's not Chinatown, but it also is pretty far from horrible. The dialogue is absolutely fantastic, and even in the throw away moments, there is a humor that seems very human. It's Hollywood sharp and witty to the point where it's almost too good to be realistic, it's just, human. There are a lot of little throw away conversations that seem like the kind of thing you'd hear in your everyday life. And that adds a nice touch of realism to what is otherwise a cop film, and those are always pretty unrealistic. The sound track is a little dated, a little 70s Adult film in places, but that was just a trope of the era and even great films like Three Days of the Condor had that 70s had that "I expect John Holmes to walk in any minute now" kind of music... but then it also had the cliche 80s sex scene instrumentals. So it feels like the merging of two eras and, audioly, it can't really decide if it wants to be 70s or 80s. And then it has crooning that seems like it fits better in a Sean Connery era 007 film. I guess what I'm saying is that, if there is a flaw, it's the sound track. Essentially what it is though is a solid cop film that is bucking for 1970s gritty and realistic, but is still, ultimately, as over the top and unrealistic as most police thrillers. It's a very enjoyable film to watch.... despite the music.

Teasers

'Sharky's Machine' movie [02] - movie trailer-TV commercial (1981)
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