Another Midnight Run

Another Midnight Run is a 1994 American made-for-television film, and the first in a series of television films produced for Universal Television's Action Pack programming block and based on the 1988 feature film Midnight Run.[1] Christopher McDonald plays bounty hunter Jack Walsh, who was portrayed by Robert De Niro in the first film. Another Midnight Run was followed by two more made-for-television sequels, Midnight Runaround and Midnight Run for Your Life.

Another Midnight Run
GenreAction
Comedy
Based onCharacters
by George Gallo
Written byEric Freiser
Directed byJames Frawley
StarringChristopher McDonald
Cathy Moriarty
Jeffrey Tambor
Ed O'Ross
Dan Hedaya
John Fleck
Sam Shamshack
Music byDavid Bergeaud
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)English
Production
Executive producer(s)Michael Duggan
George Gallo
Producer(s)Tony To
Ellen Fontana (as Ellen Erwin)
Larry Manetti (co-producer)
John P. Melfi (co-producer)
Chip Masamitsu (associate producer)
Janace Tashjian (associate producer)
Production location(s)2nd Street Tunnel between Hill and Figueroa, Los Angeles, California
Los Angeles City Hall
Sperry, Oklahoma
CinematographyRobert Draper
Editor(s)Chip Masamitsu
Tim Tommasino
Running time92 minutes
Production company(s)Universal Television
DistributorMCA TV
Release
Picture formatColor
Audio formatStereo
Original releaseFebruary 6, 1994
Chronology
Followed byMidnight Runaround

Plot summary

Jack Walsh (McDonald) is hired by bail bondsman Eddie Moscone (Dan Hedaya) to bring in Bernie Abbot (Jeffrey Tambor) and Helen Bishop (Cathy Moriarty), a husband and wife team of con artists. Moscone also brings in rival bounty hunter Marvin Dorfler (Ed O'Ross) to work with Jack, with the agreement that they will split the money; however, both men are planning to double cross each other.

Cast and characters

Alternate titles

  • Midnight Run 2: Another Midnight Run (UK)
  • Midnight Run: Cash Comes at Midnight (Germany)
gollark: It's one of these fascinating bits of weirdness where the law interacts with reality, and it's as far as I know mostly determined by who throws most money at lawyers.
gollark: Probably?
gollark: Of course, some are already illegal to use or whatever due to copyright.
gollark: If someone throws enough money at lawyers I think you could have some poems be illegal because they contain some sort of encoded illegal content, yes.
gollark: https://qntm.org/number

References


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