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© 2022, Application, may contain information not intended for minors

movie poster
movie logo
1988
By Paramount Pictures

Jay Austin is now a civilian police detective. Colonel Caldwell was his commanding officer years before when he left the military police over a disagreement over the handling of a drunk driver. Now a series of murders that cross jurisdictions force them to work together again. That Austin is now dating Caldwell's daughter is not helping their relationship.

  • Action
  • Crime
  • Mystery
  • Thriller

Crew

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    D. Constantine Conte

    Producer

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    Diane Adler

    Editor

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    Peter Hyams

    Director

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    Bruce Broughton

    Original Music Composer

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    Larry Ferguson

    Screenplay

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    Janet Brady

    Stunts

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    Kenny Endoso

    Stunts

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    Dick Ziker

    Stunts

Top cast

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    Sean Connery

    Lt. Col. Alan Caldwell

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    Mark Harmon

    Jay Austin

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    Meg Ryan

    Donna Caldwell

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    Jack Warden

    Sgt. Maj. Ross Maclure

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    Mark Blum

    Arthur Peale

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    Dana Gladstone

    Col. Paul Lawrence

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    Jenette Goldstein

    Patti Jean Lynch

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    Marvin J. McIntyre

    MP Zeke

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    Don Calfa

    Howard Buckely

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    John DiSanti

    Det. Marvin Powell

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    Robert Lesser

    Sgt. Mueller

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    James Hooks Reynolds

    George Spota

  • person photo

    Curtis W. Sims

    Sgt. Garfield

  • person photo

    Rick Zumwalt

    Bully in Bar

  • person photo

    Rosalyn Marshall

    Lawrence's Secretary

  • person photo

    Jessie Lawrence Ferguson

    Pilot at Travis AFB

  • person photo

    Larry Jenkins

    MP Dutton

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    Jesse D. Goins

    MP Bygrave

Reviews

kevin2019

9/13/2024

"The Presidio" is an interesting diversion that has an immediately intriguing and literally explosive opening gambit which is eye catching and it easily grabs your full attention, but then the pace quickly eases up out of pure necessity and the murder of Patti Jean Lynch loses all sense of urgency and it is eventually relegated to becoming a secondary consideration as the main focus of the film now concentrates upon the complex and argumentative character dynamics of Lieutenant Colonel Caldwell, his daughter Donna, and Inspector Jay Austin although all of this is nicely juxtaposed with the ongoing murder investigation. However, this film is much too pedestrian for the talented cast involved, but at least the action sequences are superb and the pace is extremely well maintained throughout.

CinemaSerf

7/4/2022

Mark Harmon is "Jay", a former military policeman turned cop who is called upon to investigate a series of murders that reintroduce him to his former CO "Col. Caldwell" (Sean Connery) with whom he doesn't especially get along. It doesn't help when he starts to date the colonel's independently minded daughter "Donna" (Meg Ryan) but can they put their differences aside long enough to find out what's going on and stop any more killings? Well, of course they can - this film has precisely no jeopardy at all. Though the motive for the crimes remains a mystery for a while, the rest of this follows a well travelled line that is disappointingly predictable. Harmon is never a particularly strong or convincing actor, Connery - and his traditional, wry, smile - clearly just wanted his fee and not for the first time Meg Ryan adds very little as this plods along. It's watchable on the television over a glass or two, but it's all very unremarkable.

GenerationofSwine

1/12/2023

Occasionally my mother would really get into a movie, choose a quote as a favorite, and then repeat it constantly in a cartoonish exaggeration of whoever said it in the film. The Persidio is one of those films she latched onto, and for years after we were subjected to her Sean Connery impression as she threatened to beat us up using only her thumb. So now every time I see it, heck, every time I'm in Frisco, that is the quote that gets stuck in my head for days after. But, in her defense, it was a very good scene and actually does deserve to be remembered and quoted more. It's my go to Sean Connery impression... when I'm not impersonating Johnny Lee Miller impersonating Sean Connery. Or the Untouchables, but I kind of feel that one is over used. Everyone goes there when they do Connery. Or, you know, I could just live in Chicago. Maybe the rest of the country and the world just does James Bond. The point is, you have a quotable Sean Connery scene. And that alone is worth it. And you have the San Francisco chase scene, and I really hate Frisco, but I do really love movies that are set there and any chase through San Francisco streets is fun if for no other reason than it makes you instantly think of Bullet. The multi-jurisdictional cliche thing is here, and tragically underused in a lot of movies. But you get a good dynamic of military and civilian cop bumping heads with one another. It's a situation that is made worse by bad blood and a bit of history, and then made even worse by a blooming romantic interest. And it's the 80s, so you know that the romantic interest is going to be Meg Ryan, no spoiler there. And all of that with an actual compelling case that the two cops have to solve. It's kind of all over the place, but in the best possible 80s cliche kind of way.