5 reviews
- tarbosh22000
- Sep 9, 2012
- Permalink
Lawrence Hilton Jacobs is back and badder than ever in the final installment of the Chance series. Good news for fans of the series, LHJ brought along his sneer and flaring nostrils and uses them with brute force! If you like being tortured by this nonsense, as I do, try L.A. Heat or L.A. Vice. Then you can try and figure out which one hurt your brain more!
I can't end the review without mentioning Dan Haggerty's appearance in the film. He's in it. There, I mentioned it. Long live Jastereo Coviare who plays the ever disturbing (unintentionally)Bear. I personally feel this character needs a spin-off series.
I can't end the review without mentioning Dan Haggerty's appearance in the film. He's in it. There, I mentioned it. Long live Jastereo Coviare who plays the ever disturbing (unintentionally)Bear. I personally feel this character needs a spin-off series.
- Leofwine_draca
- Mar 13, 2019
- Permalink
- repo_jake-1
- Feb 22, 2005
- Permalink
My review was written in June 1990 after watching the movie on P/M Entertainment video cassette.
Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs continues his screen adventures as Detective John Chance (begun two years ago opposite Jim Brown in "L. A. Heat") in this minor made-for-video actioner.
As usual, Chance is suspended for excessive use of violence. Old buddy Dan Haggerty, now working as a repo man, hires him as backup and they inadvertently get involved with stolen diamonds. A nightmare by Chance links the film with its predecessors, as former co-star William Smith appears in a flashback excerpt from "L. A. Vice".
Typical of video-driven pictures, film ends in arbitrary and unsatisfying fashion.
Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs continues his screen adventures as Detective John Chance (begun two years ago opposite Jim Brown in "L. A. Heat") in this minor made-for-video actioner.
As usual, Chance is suspended for excessive use of violence. Old buddy Dan Haggerty, now working as a repo man, hires him as backup and they inadvertently get involved with stolen diamonds. A nightmare by Chance links the film with its predecessors, as former co-star William Smith appears in a flashback excerpt from "L. A. Vice".
Typical of video-driven pictures, film ends in arbitrary and unsatisfying fashion.