Hooch & Daddy-O (2005) Poster

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8/10
Baretta meets Starsky & Hutch meets TJ Hooker
mmontcha2 April 2006
Much of the movie takes place in the form of a series of flashbacks to Hooch & Daddy-O's happier heyday, back when the cast was part of the leading Friday night police drama of the 1980s, facing typical problems that many other police dramas had, including cast turnover and replacement of the star actor, including spinoffs in the form of Hooch & Daddy-O comic books and Saturday morning cartoons. Even after Hooch & Daddy-O was cancelled, tens of thousands of loyal fans wouldn't let them be forgotten. Similar to the Star Trek phenomenon of the 1960s, the Hooch & Daddy-O phenomenon lived on and on, relying on their loyal fans to keep the reruns running. Even after that died away, their fans invaded comic book conventions with Hooch & Daddy-O memorabilia, and if that weren't enough, they mounted a letter writing campaign to bring them all back, and they kept at it until the original cast finally was reunited. After 20 years, there would finally be a return to the limelight and the Big Screen.

One of the lead actors had fallen into hard times while another attempted to make ends meet with new age improv theater. Bitter personal conflicts of the past rose up once again as attempts were made to bury the proverbial hatchet, just for the making of the movie. One particularly funny episode among many involves one of the leading actors agreeing to be hypnotized so he could act better. Another leading actor has to call security to keep a fan from stalking him, even though she had his child eighteen years ago, and she still has the VHS - the sole evidence - of the night the baby was conceived. (That sounds kind of raunchy but it's more like R rated stuff than anything else.) Halfway into the movie we discover that Hooch (or was it Daddy-O) demanded too much money in the 1980s (a la Suzanne Somers in Threes Company) and was summarily fired and replaced with another actor that didn't even look like him! It's almost like firing Adam West from the Batman of the 1960s and replacing him with a 98 pound weakling because the "new" guy could remember his lines better! Even after the series ended in the 1980s, it lived on in the form of Saturday morning cartoons and comicbooks.

Then, once the cast was reunited, there were still problems, all ego related.

This is a very funny "mockumentary" about a long-running television series of the early 1980s, back when police shot first and asked questions later. Even if you weren't a Starsky & Hutch fan, and are too young to remember Baretta or TJ Hooker, this movie is still worth watching.
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8/10
hooch and daddy-o + del taco + motorcycle wheelie guy = one great night
spielbergfan00130 July 2005
yeah, i knew the director and most of the cast of this "mocumentary", so it was pretty damn funny... to me! Daddy-o's facial expressions were just, you know, they really just made the film. so, saw it at the pageant, in the LOOP, right here in st. louis. and as i sit here watching "an American tail" on my friend's television set, eating Del Taco, it dawns upon me just how much i would like to be watching the "Hooch and Daddy-o super fun cartoon show" instead. and on the way home from missing the highway exit, we saw a guy pop a bad-ass wheelie right in front of us. that takes skill. and by the way, me and my friend got a Hooch and Daddy-o t-shirt signed by the director and (some) cast, yeah, i know, AMAZING!
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