Advertisement
Guest User

Lethal Weapon 3 In Hindi 720p

a guest
Sep 18th, 2018
64
0
Never
Not a member of Pastebin yet? Sign Up, it unlocks many cool features!
text 8.95 KB | None | 0 0
  1.  
  2.  
  3. ********************
  4. Lethal Weapon 3 In Hindi 720p
  5. http://urllio.com/r2ldt
  6. (Copy & Paste link)
  7. ********************
  8.  
  9.  
  10.  
  11.  
  12.  
  13.  
  14.  
  15.  
  16.  
  17.  
  18.  
  19.  
  20.  
  21.  
  22.  
  23.  
  24.  
  25.  
  26.  
  27.  
  28.  
  29.  
  30.  
  31.  
  32.  
  33.  
  34.  
  35.  
  36.  
  37.  
  38.  
  39. Los Angeles police sergeant Roger Murtaugh and his partner, Sergeant Martin Riggs, arrest Billy Phelps for trying to rob an armored truck, this being just 8 days until Murtaugh is scheduled to retire. In the interrogation room, Billy is murdered by Lieutenant Jack Edward Travis, a vicious former cop who now sells guns that are stolen from evidence storage facilities. The investigation of Travis teams Riggs and Murtaugh up with Sergeant Lorna Cole of the Internal Affairs Division. Leo Getz, who is now a legitimate real estate agent, gets involved when he sees Travis's face on a paused videotape then says he recognizes Travis. Riggs finds himself falling in love with Lorna. Later, in a shootout against a street gang, Murtaugh kills a gangster who turns out to be Darrell Smithers, the best friend of Murtaugh's son Nick. A guilt ridden Murtaugh later tries to drink himself to death, but Riggs helps him realize that they must go after Travis, the man that Darrell's gun came from.
  40. Riggs and Murtaugh are back. This time after another one of Riggs' goofs, they are busted down to patrolmen. But they come across a robbery and they catch one of the robbers and discover that he has in his possession armor piercing bullets. Which means that no cop is safe. They go and try to speak to the man but Lorna Cole, a cop from Internal Affairs also wants to speak to him but Riggs is obstinate, so they go to the Captain, who not only backs them up but reinstates them as detectives. But when they go to see him, they find the man dead. But the learn who the killer is, a former cop named Jack Travis. But when they learn about this Cole shuts them out. But they get a lead from Leo Getz but unfortunately he gets away. Later Murtaugh shoots a boy who is armed with an automatic weapon and becomes despondent. Riggs is confronted by Cole who tells him that she should have been informed of the lead he had on Travis. Riggs then counters that she should tell him what is going on. She then tells him and they go out to try and find Travis.
  41. Has any movie franchise sunk as far and as rapidly as the Lethal Weapon series did with Part 3? The original film and its first sequel always had an element of comedy to go with the gritty action, but in this third instalment the humour is brought to the fore (and the nastiness toned down); the result is absolutely cringe-worthy, as tough cops Riggs and Murtaugh (Mel Gibson and Danny Glover) are regularly turned into incompetent clowns for the amusement of a younger demographic.<br/><br/>From the opening scene in which Riggs stupidly attempts to diffuse a bomb with disastrous results, to the end credits sequence in which Riggs, clearly having not learnt his lesson, considers diffusing yet another bomb, Lethal Weapon 3 is an embarrassment to the action genre. Jeffery Boam, who did such a good job with Part 2, completely screws up here, his plot being predictable and dull and the characters frequently acting against type just for laughs. Worse still, Boam brings back shifty Leo Getz (Joe Pesci), making him even more obnoxious and irritating than before.<br/><br/>Once again, Riggs is given a love interest—internal affairs cop Lorna Cole (Rene Russo)—but this chapter being a tamer affair aimed at the whole family, she doesn&#39;t get a sex scene (thankfully sparing the viewer yet another Mel Gibson ass shot) and doesn&#39;t wind up swimming with the fishes like poor old Patsy Kensit&#39;s Rika; instead, Lorna joins in with the crime-fighting fun, proving to be as handy with her fists and guns as the guys. All of this nonsense is accompanied by the series&#39; terrible signature sax and guitar score, which only goes to make matters even more intolerable.
  42. Lethal Weapon 3<br/><br/>1 And A Half Out Of 5<br/><br/>Lethal Weapon 3 seems an unnecessary installment in the franchise; a decision taken carelessly with nothing but box office in mind but frankly that audience is much smarter that &quot;good cop bad cop&quot; routine. The humor is added in here to lighten things up but it is added forcibly with an amateur editing on its side, directing the whole franchise towards the commercial cinema where the big explosives brings big bucks at the cost quality. <br/><br/>There isn&#39;t a single piece of art to explore in here for there is too much of everything and no amount of nothing; it is lighter on material no matter how crispy. It falls flat on face in its technical aspects like sound department, choreography and editing. One of the main reason it doesn&#39;t work is because it lacks a better threat (the antagonist is undercooked in here) to project the appropriate stake to the audience. <br/><br/>The screenplay by Jeffrey Boam is hefty on the failed attempts, for it never actually reaches to that scale and addition to that, Richard Donner; the director, seems to be losing its touch with the execution of it. The performance is still up to the mark by the duo Mel Gibson and Donald Glover in their parallel role and Joe Pesci as a supportive cast.<br/><br/> Lethal Weapon 3 is either non-working or all out of ammo as it sweats behind the screen to hold the audience for its runtime let along bedazzle them.
  43. A wham-bam encounter, it gives you everything you (presumably) want, sets itself up for another sequel, and it makes sure you don't recall a thing about it in the morning.
  44. Los Angeles police detective Martin Riggs (<a href="/name/nm0000154/">Mel Gibson</a>) and his partner Roger Murtaugh (<a href="/name/nm0000418/">Danny Glover</a>), who is set to retire in one week, come up against Internal Affairs (I.A.) investigator Lorna Cole (<a href="/name/nm0000623/">Rene Russo</a>) when I.A. decides to take over the interrogation of a man Riggs and Murtaugh arrested for attempting to steal an armored car. Forced by Captain Ed Murphy (<a href="/name/nm0434676/">Steve Kahan</a>) to work together, the three detectives compare notes and learn that the I.A. investigation actually centers around rogue cop Jack Travis (<a href="/name/nm0934179/">Stuart Wilson</a>) who is suspected of stealing impounded weapons and selling them on the black market. Leo Getz (<a href="/name/nm0000582/">Joe Pesci</a>), now a real estate agent, also joins in when he tells Riggs that he recognizes Travis. Lethal Weapon 3 is the third movie in the Lethal Weapon series, preceded by <a href="/title/tt0093409/">Lethal Weapon (1987)</a> (1987) and <a href="/title/tt0097733/">Lethal Weapon 2 (1989)</a> (1989) and followed by <a href="/title/tt0122151/">Lethal Weapon 4 (1998)</a> (1998). It is based on a story and screenplay by American screenwriters Jeffrey Boam and Robert Mark Kamen based on characters created by Shane Black in the first movie. Leo was in protective custody in Lethal Weapon 2 because he was going to testify against the South Africans. Seeing as how Riggs and Murtaugh killed all of them, there was no need for Leo to testify or go into witness protection. In the fight at Rancho Royale, Lorna is shot by Travis, who then goes after Riggs. As Riggs and Travis chase each other through the burning construction, Murtaugh finds an ammo box containing &quot;cop killer&quot; bullets, which he loads in a gun and tosses to Riggs, currently pinned down by Travis&#39; front-end loader. Riggs fires the bullets through the bucket of the loader, killing Travis. He then runs back to tend to Lorna. Although she was badly injured, it is revealed that she was wearing two bullet-proof vests, which prevented a fatal injury. As the helicopter prepares to fly them to a hospital, Riggs leans over and whispers, &quot;I love you,&quot; into Lorna&#39;s ear. Later, as Murtaugh relaxes in the bathtub, his family enters the bathroom singing, &quot;Happy Retirement Day&quot; and carrying a cake with candles for every year that he was on the force. When told to blow out the candles, however, Murtaugh tells them that he&#39;s decided NOT to retire after all. Suddenly, Leo Getz bursts in to announce that he&#39;s finally sold Murtaugh&#39;s &quot;termite-infected turkey&quot; and needs Murtaugh&#39;s signature on the contract. When Murtaugh tells him that the house is not for sale and that he plans to live in it for another 10 years, Leo becomes irate and has to be shown out by Murtaugh&#39;s wife Trish (<a href="/name/nm0522306/">Darlene Love</a>). In the final scene, Murtaugh sees daughter Rianne (<a href="/name/nm0938159/">Traci Wolfe</a>) kissing Riggs goodbye as she heads off to work. As they get into their own car, Riggs and Murtaugh begin bickering about Riggs&#39; intentions with regrds to Rianne, Riggs taking up smoking again, who&#39;s going to drive, etc., until Riggs announces that he&#39;s going to pick up Lorna from the hospital that afternoon and that things are getting serious between them. They have a dog and everything. Three dialogue/plot scenes were extended for the Director&#39;s Cut adding up nearly three minutes to the runtime. a5c7b9f00b
Advertisement
Add Comment
Please, Sign In to add comment
Advertisement