Tango & Cash

Two of L.A.'s top rival cops are going to have to work together… Even if it kills them.

6.5
19891h 44m

Ray Tango and Gabriel Cash are two successful narcotics detectives who can't stand each other. Crime lord Yves Perret, furious at the loss of income they have caused him, plots an elaborate revenge against them.

Production

Logo for Warner Bros. Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Trailer 1

Trailer 1

Cast

Photo of Sylvester Stallone

Sylvester Stallone

Raymond 'Ray' Tango

Photo of Kurt Russell

Kurt Russell

Gabriel 'Gabe' Cash

Photo of Teri Hatcher

Teri Hatcher

Katherine 'Kiki' Tango

Photo of Jack Palance

Jack Palance

Yves Perret

Photo of Philip Tan

Philip Tan

Chinese Gunman

Photo of Edward Bunker

Edward Bunker

Capt. Holmes

Photo of Roy Brocksmith

Roy Brocksmith

Fed. Agent Davis

Photo of Susan Krebs

Susan Krebs

Prosecutor

Photo of David Byrd

David Byrd

Judge McCormick

Photo of Bing Russell

Bing Russell

Van Driver

Photo of Phil Rubenstein

Phil Rubenstein

Assistant Warden Matt Sokowski

Photo of Elizabeth Sung

Elizabeth Sung

Interpreter

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Reviews

J

John Chard

7/10

If you really wanted to stare death in the eye, you shoulda gotten married.

Sylvester Stallone and Kurt Russell play polar opposite Los Angeles cops who are framed by an arch nemesis and forced to team up in order to clear their name.

Unashamedly macho and very much of its time, this is daft energetic fun that's full of octane inventive action and ever quotable one liners. Stallone is Tango, the smart dressed sophisticated policeman, Russel is Cash, the slobbish act first - ask questions later copper, both men very different but both excellent at their jobs.

Pic gets by mostly on the chemistry between Stallone and Russell, who put much zest into their respective characters bickering and bantering. Action is well put together by director Andrey Konchalovskiy, but unfortunately the final third of the piece starts to sag as our mismatched cops start to respect and befriend each other and the plot reaches the inevitable conclusion.

It doesn't help matters that Jack Palance's main villain is only a bit part player, or that his head henchman Requin (the usually ace Brion James) gives us a quite appalling British accent. Add in Teri Hatcher who is in it purely for dressage and as a cypher between the two boys, then it's a picture not without problems. Yet the script and star turns from the leading duo ensure this remains a favourite of many whom lapped it up back in the backend of the 1980s. 7/10

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