Quando la moglie di un sergente viene accoltellata a morte c'è qualcuno che non si accontenta della versione ufficiale fornita dall'esercito e comincia a scavare a fondo nella vicenda. Così ... Leggi tuttoQuando la moglie di un sergente viene accoltellata a morte c'è qualcuno che non si accontenta della versione ufficiale fornita dall'esercito e comincia a scavare a fondo nella vicenda. Così a fondo che quella che scava potrebbe essere la propria tomba.Quando la moglie di un sergente viene accoltellata a morte c'è qualcuno che non si accontenta della versione ufficiale fornita dall'esercito e comincia a scavare a fondo nella vicenda. Così a fondo che quella che scava potrebbe essere la propria tomba.
Recensioni in evidenza
The wife of Sergeant Martin Cummins is murdered by home invaders which is a really odd concept other than the fact that the housing for the base personnel is nearly empty. Only one other unit was occupied in the building that Cummins and his wife lived in.
Lou Diamond Phillips plays a CID investigator and apparently as such doesn't have to wear a uniform. He's already assigned to a case involving theft at the Presidio of military equipment, but wants this homicide. The head of the Military Police Eugene Clark doesn't want him and that leads to a running conflict throughout the film. Phillips gets more than moral support from Victoria Pratt another MP.
The two cases at first not connected get connected during the course of the film.
Some nice supporting performances also come from Leslie Esterbrook as Cummins's partying mother, Daniel Roebuck as the base commander, and Jason Priestley as very hostile brother-in-law to Cummins.
About halfway through we know who did it. After that it's just a question of gathering evidence. Canadian locations stand in for the Presidio as it is now a national park and shooting there would be problematic.
Lots of goofs and errors, but the basic plot is a good one.
Phillips plays a military detective, and former MP, who comes to the Presidio (the former military base in San Francisco that was closed and converted into a national park in 1994, not to be confused with the Presidio in Monterrey, CA which houses the Defense Language Institute) to solve a murder. His love interest, a female MP who looks extremely awkward in her over-sized uniform, proves way too easy, so it is difficult to sympathize with them as individuals or as a couple.
The plot boasts TV-ready predictability, and the production was obviously made for TV- there were even breaks in the movie to insert commercials! What a disappointment.
My advice...skip "Murder at the Presidio" and watch a "Law & Order" rerun instead. The plot will undoubtedly be more interesting.
Lo sapevi?
- BlooperAt the end of the film the MP Major refers to the "Military Code of Criminal Justice;" it is actually the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
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