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.