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Shakedown: Hawaii features an open world island with 16-bit style graphics, a top-down perspective, over 200 accessible buildings, and a destructible environment.In addition to a story mode following the three main characters, the player can break away from missions to free-roam the map and extort local businesses, use a variety of weapons to cause chaos, attempt arcade-like challenges and ...
Bayside Shakedown 3 (踊る大捜査線 THE MOVIE 3 ヤツらを解放せよ!, Odoru Daisōsasen The Movie 3: Yatsura o Kaihō Seyo! ) is a 2010 Japanese action drama film directed by Katsuyuki Motohiro .
Bayside Shakedown 2 (踊る大捜査線 THE MOVIE 2 レインボーブリッジを封鎖せよ!, Odoru Daisōsasen Za Mūbī Tsū Reinbōburizzi o Fūsaseyo!) is the second film based on the popular Bayside Shakedown TV series, known for its unique and humorous depiction of the Japanese police force while avoiding the conventions that define most police dramas.
At the Shakedown, athletes will take part in a slopestyle competition that demands a mastery of two different disciplines: the big air and the rail setup, which features multiple options revealed only on the first day of competition. Though fans revel in the unveiling of the Shakedown’s best-kept secret, it is also highly anticipated by ...
Bayside Shakedown (踊る大捜査線, Odoru Daisōsasen) is a Japanese police comedy-drama television series originally broadcast by the Fuji Television group in 1997. The series was developed by Ryoichi Kimizuka and stars Oda Yūji , Toshirō Yanagiba , Eri Fukatsu , Chosuke Ikariya , Miki Mizuno , and Yūsuke Santamaria .
Odoru daisosasen – The Movie (踊る大捜査線 THE MOVIE), known internationally as Bayside Shakedown, is a 1998 Japanese crime comedy film. The film was adapted from the 1997 television series Bayside Shakedown .
Bayside Shakedown: The Final (踊る大捜査線 THE FINAL 新たなる希望, Odoru Daisōsasen The Final: Arata Naru Kibō) is a 2012 Japanese suspense action comedy film directed by Katsuyuki Motohiro. It was released on September 7, 2012.
Shakedown is a 2002 American film. Roger Corman wanted to make an earthquake film so Brian Katkin wrote a take on Reservoir Dogs set during an earthquake. The movie was shot over twenty days on a budget of $500,000. [1] The Schlock Pit said " you’d certainly be hard pressed to find something from this New Concorde era that’s this much fun." [1]