6/20/2023 0 Comments Cast of hot shotsSara Echeagaray as Ava (season 2), a former star volleyball player who comes to Westbrook after washing out of her sport in a manner similar to Coach Korn.Yvette Nicole Brown as Sherilyn Thomas, the no-nonsense dean of Westbrook School for Girls. Cricket Wampler as Samantha Finkman, the Westbrook Sirens' shooting guard.Tisha Eve Custodio as Carolyn "Mouse" Smith, a Westbrook Sirens' player who comes from a military background.Monique Green as Olive Cooper (season 1), a Westbrook Sirens player who is obsessed with using social media.Because she lost her father several years ago, she forms a bond with Coach Korn. Tiana Le as Destiny Winters, the Westbrook Sirens' power forward.The school's gym was named after her family. Nell Verlaque as Louise Gruzinsky, the Westbrook Sirens' star player and point guard.Sophia Mitri Schloss as Emma Korn, Marvyn's teenage daughter.Richard Robichaux as George Pappas (season 1), the school counselor at Westbrook School for Girls.Jessalyn Gilsig as Holly Barrett, the Westbrook Sirens' good natured down-to-earth assistant coach and a biology teacher at the school.John Stamos as Marvyn Korn, a temperamental basketball coach who coaches at Westbrook School for Girls in San Diego, California.The series follows Marvyn Korn, a temperamental basketball coach who is fired from his job at the University at Wisconsin and relocates to California to coach a girls’ basketball team at Westbrook School, an elite high school for girls.Ĭast and characters Main The series is reported be removed from Disney+ on May 26, 2023. In February 2023, the series was cancelled after two seasons. In September 2021, the series was renewed for a second season, which premiered on October 12, 2022. Kelley, Dean Lorey and Brad Garrett for Disney+ starring John Stamos, Jessalyn Gilsig, and Yvette Nicole Brown. However, if "Hot Shots!" helps perpetuate that absence in any way, then this satirical mission was not totally in vain.Big Shot is an American sports comedy-drama television series created by David E. At this point, air-jock movies such as "Top Gun," "The Right Stuff" and "Navy SEALs" are long since gone from U.S. On his own, Abrahams didn't exactly display smoldering, directorial prowess in "Welcome Home, Roxy Carmichael" and "Big Business." Much of "Hot Shots!" has traces of Proft's sillier-rather-than-funny creation, "Police Academy."Īnother problem for the movie is timing, or lack thereof. The project feels like a Zucker Brothers rerun - a slapdash, second-generation effort. But Zucker brothers Jerry and David are definitely MIA. The movie's directed by Jim Abrahams, who co-writes with Pat Proft. (It also indulges in unwarranted Arab bashing - a slur it wouldn't dare make on any other ethnic group.) The problem is, half of the creative team (which also created the wonderful TV parody "Police Squad!") is missing. It lacks a hidden ingredient, a structural punch. "Hot Shots!" merely dresses men up in uniform and tears stripes off their dignity. Sheen finds himself falling for leggy Golino, the base psychiatrist, as well as caught in a dastardly plot by arms manufacturers to ruin the mission. Navy flying mission, which includes pilots Cary Elwes and Jon Cryer and buffoonish Admiral Lloyd Bridges. Out of the blue, he's called upon to join an elite U.S. He's been living in tortured retreat (in a tepee), weathering a peculiar psychological condition described as Paternal Conflict Syndrome. Sheen, assuming the plot matters, is the son continued on next page of a pilot who died in disgrace. He cracks an egg and drops it on her stomach. When Sheen lets an ice cube drip on her, the water sizzles. She lies naked before him, her chest taut and hot. Picture this - and chances are the previews spoiled it for you anyway: Air jock pilot Charlie Sheen is seducing hot babe Valeria Golino. It depends on your ability to lower yourself into - or steer stoically clear of - the idiocy pit. But, by sheer weight of numbers, many of them work. The next minute, you're just as likely to roll your eyes.Ĭreated by two of the four people who gave you "Kentucky Fried Movie," "Airplane!" and "The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad!" the movie's nowhere near the inspired funniness of its predecessors. Sometimes you're chuckling, even laughing uproariously. This parody of World War II plane films and the round of "Top Gun"-type pictures is a hit-or-miss affair. "Hot Shots!" is socially unredeeming, despicable, in poor taste and utterly ridiculous. Children under 13 should be accompanied by a parent
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |