Police Academy (1984-1994, all seven films)

Police Academy (1984-1994, all seven films)
6 / 10

Police Academy is the comedy franchise that defined the rapid-decline model of sequel filmmaking. Hugh Wilson directed the 1984 original, which made approximately one hundred and fifty million dollars worldwide on a four million dollar budget and is one of the most profitable comedies in 1980s Hollywood. Six sequels followed at the rate of one per year from 1985 through 1989, plus a delayed Mission to Moscow in 1994. Most of the original cast appeared in most of the films. The quality dropped each year. The audience kept showing up anyway until they stopped, which they did by the seventh entry.

The films collectively grossed approximately five hundred million dollars worldwide. The franchise is the case study other studios studied for years on how to produce sequels cheaply and reliably until the audience exhausted itself. The model worked until it did not work, and the films now exist as a complete artifact of 1980s comedy filmmaking economics.

The First Film

The original Police Academy is a competent ensemble comedy. Steve Guttenberg plays Carey Mahoney, a small-time thief sentenced to police academy in lieu of jail. The premise is that a new city policy admits all applicants regardless of qualifications. The academy is filled with the kind of people the previous policy would have rejected. Hijinks ensue. The casting is the foundation. Bubba Smith as Hightower. Michael Winslow as Jones, the man who makes sound effects with his mouth. Andrew Rubin as Martin. Donovan Scott as Leslie Barbara. Kim Cattrall as Karen Thompson. G. W. Bailey as Lieutenant Harris. George Gaynes as Commandant Lassard.

The script is broad. The comedy is mostly physical and verbal hijinks. The film has aged in ways the original audience could not have predicted. Some sequences are uncomfortable by modern standards. The original is the strongest of the seven. The fall from there is steep.

For Writers

An ensemble comedy benefits from giving each character one specific schtick the audience can identify them by. Police Academy works because the audience can immediately recognize Hightower as the giant, Jones as the sound effects man, Tackleberry as the gun enthusiast, and so on. Each character is a single joke executed reliably. The lesson is that ensemble shorthand requires every member to be reducible to one or two visible traits. Subtle characterization in an ensemble usually means the audience cannot keep them apart.

The Decline

Police Academy 2: Their First Assignment (1985) introduced Bobcat Goldthwait as Zed and added the formula’s first variation. The third film, Back in Training (1986), brought back Zed and added more recruits. The fourth, Citizens on Patrol (1987), added a civilian patrol angle. The fifth, Assignment: Miami Beach (1988), was the last to feature Guttenberg. The sixth, City Under Siege (1989), continued without him. The seventh, Mission to Moscow (1994), arrived after a five-year gap and tried to revive the franchise with a Russian setting.

Each entry recycles more of the previous film’s material. By the fourth entry, the sequences had become recognizable templates: the Blue Oyster Bar scene, the giant Hightower lifting something, the Jones sound effects routine, the Tackleberry weapons obsession. The franchise was producing variations of itself rather than new material. The audience accepted the recycling for a while. Eventually they did not.

For Writers

Franchise extensions that recycle material rather than producing new material exhaust their audience within four or five entries. Police Academy made it through seven. Most modern franchises cannot stretch that far before the audience notices. The lesson is that returning audience members want familiarity in the recipe and novelty in the dish. Recycle the structure. Vary the content. If you recycle the content as well, the audience eventually realizes they are paying to see the same film again.

The Cast

The genuine charm of the franchise is the cast’s evident affection for each other. Most of the principals worked together across multiple films. They knew each other’s timing. They knew the audience expectations for their characters. The performances are competent ensemble work even when the scripts are weak.

Steve Guttenberg’s career trajectory is the franchise in miniature. He was a major commercial star in the mid-1980s. The Police Academy films were one of three franchises he was anchoring simultaneously (along with Three Men and a Baby and Cocoon). His departure after the fifth entry was partly career strategy and partly script exhaustion. He never recovered the leading-man status he had during the franchise’s peak. The franchise was the high point of his career as a leading man.

For Writers

Long-running ensemble work creates real chemistry that no single production can manufacture. The Police Academy cast had been together for years by the later films. That history is visible on screen even when the writing is not. The lesson is that working with the same collaborators over time produces something that cannot be assembled quickly. If you can build an ensemble across multiple projects, the cumulative result will have a quality that one-off productions cannot match.

Craft Note

Michael Winslow’s sound-effect performances are the franchise’s most distinctive craft element across seven films. Winslow’s vocal mimicry of guns, vehicles, and ambient effects produced sustained physical comedy that no other performer in the franchise could replicate. The work demonstrates that a single specific performer’s signature ability can anchor a franchise’s identity even when surrounded by ensemble work that varies in quality.

The Verdict

6/10 average across the franchise. The first film is a 7. The second is a 6. By the fifth, you are at 5. The sixth is a 4. The seventh, Mission to Moscow, is a 3. Watch the first film. Watch the second if you enjoyed it. Skip the rest unless you specifically want to know how the franchise declined.


FAQ

Should I watch all seven?

No. The first two are watchable. The rest are diminishing returns.

Did Steve Guttenberg do other films?

Yes. Three Men and a Baby (1987), Cocoon (1985), Diner (1982). He had a substantial career before and during Police Academy. His career declined after the franchise.

How does it compare to the Naked Gun films?

Naked Gun is funnier and more technically skilled. Police Academy is broader and less precise. Both are 1980s ensemble comedies with limited shelf life.

Was there a TV series?

Yes. Police Academy: The Series (1997) and an animated series in the 1980s. Neither is worth seeking out.

Is the franchise being rebooted?

Various reboot attempts have been announced over the years. None have materialized as of 2026.

Who is Bobcat Goldthwait?

American comedian who joined the franchise in the second film as Zed and went on to a substantial career as a writer-director (World’s Greatest Dad, God Bless America).

Should I watch this?

The first one, yes. The rest, only if you are a completist.

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