Reno 911!: Miami Movie Review
Reno 911!: Miami Review

"Reno 911!: Miami" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Robert Ben GarantProducer : Danny DeVito,Ben Garant,John Landgraf,Michael Shamberg,Stacey Sher
Screenwiter : Robert Ben Garant,Kerri Kenney-Silver,Thomas Lennon
Starring : Thomas Lennon,Robert Ben Garant,Niecy Nash,Mary Birdsong,Cedric Yarbrough,Carlos Alazraqui,Kerri Kenney,Wendi McLendon-Covey,Paul Rudd
It's never a good sign when a film's press screening occurs the night before it
opens. The film is instantly labeled a loser long before the opening credits
even roll. So if Reno 911!: Miami was to be anything like its Comedy Central
inspiration, then its 11th hour screening should come as a surprise.
Unfortunately, for the most part, Miami is exactly what everyone expected it to
be: raunchy and brainless. Yet, what I didn't expect was for Miami to be so
bawdy, so unfunny, and so unlike its small screen roots that after the first 30
minutes I was so desperate to change the channel.
In Miami, all of the familiar bungling deputies from the TV show are part of
the action, along with their hang-ups. Led by the short-shorts wearing
Lieutenant Jim Dangle (Thomas Lennon), the inept Washoe County Sheriff's
Department is "invited" to attend a national law enforcement convention in
South Florida. But when the gang arrives, they quickly find themselves
outclassed and left out of the convention's festivities. When a biohazard
chemical is released at the convention, quarantining the nation's police force,
Dangle and Company are the only uncontaminated law enforcement officers
available to keep the streets of Miami safe.
Say your prayers, Miami! The deputies can't even figure out how to answer calls
at the city's 911 dispatch center. And once they finally do, they then have
trouble getting the high-tech police squad cars moving. In the field, Deputies
Travis Junior (Robert Ben Garant) and James Garcia (Carlos Alazraqui) use a
tourist map to find an animal disturbance call while Deputies Raineesha
Williams (Niecy Nash) and Trudy Wiegal (Kerri Kenney) patrol the beach in their
undersized bathing suits. These events work, largely because they follow the
television show's proven format. But the Cops-like police segments are quickly
dropped in favor of cumbersome sexual exploits that detract from the story at
hand. The well endowed Deputy Clementine Johnson (Wendi McLendon-Covey) spends
the entire movie on an exhaustive search for the tattoo parlor responsible for
inking her breast.
At just over 80 minutes, Miami may seem like the appropriate length for a big
screen version of a 30-minute television satire. Yet, the movie drags on
seemingly forever and replays the same demonstrations of vulgarity over and
over and over again. Each subsequent scene tries to outdo the shock-factor of
the previous. At one point, half the squad is on display masturbating in their
hotel rooms! This isn't funny; this isn't what makes Reno 911! amusing on
television. It's very apparent that Miami's creators were so caught up in the
fact that they could show all of the stuff that gets censored from the
television show that they lost sight of the show's true character. Didn't the
Police Academy folks already wear out this city, anyway? Yikes.
But, just because you can tweak the show's formula for the big screen, doesn't
mean it’s the right thing to do. What's most unfortunate is that Miami could
have worked as a successful vehicle to reel in a larger audience for the
significantly better cable show. As it stands, this failed big screen stunt
just leaves more distaste long after the final credits roll.
I specifically asked for no salt, no salt!
Reviewer: David Levine





