Spy Hard

Spy Hard(1996)

PG-13
05/24/1996 (US)Comedy, Action1h 21m
5.4

"All the action. All the women. Half the intelligence."

Overview

The evil Gen. Rancor has his sights set on world domination, and only one man can stop him: Dick Steele, also known as Agent WD-40. Rancor needs to obtain a computer circuit for the missile that he is planning to fire, so Steele teams up with Veronique Ukrinsky, a KGB agent whose father designed the chip. Together they try to locate the evil mastermind's headquarters, where Veronique's father and several other hostages are being held.

Aaron Seltzer

Screenplay

Jason Friedberg

Screenplay

Rick Friedberg

Director

Rick Friedberg

Screenplay

Dick Chudnow

Screenplay

Aaron Seltzer

Story

Jason Friedberg

Story

Where to Watch

Rent

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home

Buy

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home

Powered by JustWatch

Popularity Trend

Last 30 Days
This chart shows the popularity trend over the past 30 days.

Media

Spy Hard (1996) - Theatrical Trailer

Spy Hard (1996) - Theatrical Trailer

Trailer

"Weird Al" Yankovic - Spy Hard

"Weird Al" Yankovic - Spy Hard

Clip

Social

C
A review by CinemaSerf
5.0

Written on July 14, 2022

I think Leslie Nielsen ought to have re-considered his involvement with this really cringe-making comedy. His "Agent Dick" and "WD40" monikers are the stuff of "Carry On" films, and the rest of the humour and dialogue is almost as childish. It's a "Bond" spoof, right from the Maurice Binder-inspired titles, but the plot is far inferior to even the worst of Ian Fleming's works. Nicolette Sheridan ("Ukrinsky") does her best as his Russian counterpart as they both seek out a not-so-ruthless "Rancor" (Andy Griffith) who, of course, wants to take over the world - but the ensuing escapades border all to often on the ridiculously slapstick. The juice has already been well and truly squeezed from the "Drebin" style of hapless character with the daft expressions and double-entendre ridden lines; and this film seems to go on for far longer than the eighty minutes running time. Maybe it just serves to remind us how entertaining the "Naked Gun" franchise was in the beginning, but I can see little else to applaud with this poorly thought out and really derivative attempt at entertainment.