Movie |
Sequel | Slapstick Comedy
Only one man has the particular set of skills... to lead Police Squad and save the world!
Disclaimer: All content and media belong to original content streaming platforms/owners like Netflix, Disney+ Hotstar, Amazon Prime Videos, JioCinema, SonyLIV etc. 91mobiles entertainment does not claim any rights to the content and only aggregate the content along with the service providers links.
Only one man has the particular set of skills... to lead Police Squad and save the world!
87%
Rotten TomatoesBest Comedic Performance | 2025 | Liam Neeson
Best Actor in Motion Picture Comedy or Musical | 2026 | Liam Neeson
Best Actor in a Motion Picture Comedy or Musical | 2026 | Liam Neeson
Favorite Actor in a Feature Film | 2025 | Liam Neeson
Best Lead Performance | 2025 | Liam Neeson
Best Supporting Performance | 2025 | Pamela Anderson
Best Adapted Screenplay | 2025 | Doug Mand
Best Editing | 2025 | Brian Scott Olds
Outstanding Achievement in Casting Big Budget Feature Comedy | 2026 | Judith Sunga
Best Original Score for a Comedy Film | 2026 | Lorne Balfe
Budget 42,000,000 USD
Box Office Collection 102,147,396 USD
Liam Neeson was 72 years-old at the time of filming, five years older than Leslie Nielsen was at the time he made his final film appearance as Frank Drebin (aged 67 at the time he filmed 'Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult').
In 2018, David Zucker said he, Jim Abrahams, and Jerry Zucker wrote a script for a fourth film in which Frank Drebin's son was a security guard who gets mixed up with the CIA and is sent on a spy adventure. It would have been a spoof of the "Bourne" and "Mission: Impossible" films as well as the newer Bond films with Daniel Craig. The original title was "The Naked Gun 4: Nordberg Did It," then got changed to "Naked Impossible." According to Zucker, the script was enthusiastically embraced by Paramount production head Jon Gonda. However, in a later meeting, the script was not as well-received by Gonda's boss, who objected to some mild off-color jokes (including one where a woman gets a breast reduction to fit into a Kevlar bulletproof vest). Nothing happened with the project after that, and Zucker only found out about the reboot when he read about it in the press.
Akiva Schaffer revealed why he wrote only one O.J. Simpson joke in the film, "To be honest, we never wrote another O.J. joke. We just went, 'Yep, that takes care of that,'" Schaffer says. "I didn't know that the joke would kill as hard as it did at our first test screening. If I had known that, then maybe I would've written other jokes. But you want to be respectful of everything that revolves around him, so it's not something I really took glee in. We just had to acknowledge it in a way we thought was not dancing on anybody's misfortunes."
The scene in the end credits when the cop car is driving through a house, on the sidewalk, etc. is the same scene in the original film's opening credits.
Development commenced in 2009 for a project initially slated as a direct-to-TV release featuring Leslie Nielsen. Titled 'The Naked Gun 4: Rhythm of Evil,' the concept unfolded as a passing-the-torch narrative, with Frank Drebin mentoring a younger police officer.