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To help, K-9 Sergeant Brannigan (played by Ed O'Neill) gives Dooley an unorthodox drug-sniffing police dog called "Jerry Lee" (named after rock-and-roll singer Jerry Lee Lewis). [3] The duo attempt to put Lyman behind bars but Dooley quickly learns Jerry Lee is a mischievous smart aleck who works only when and how he wants to.
Koton or Rando (died 1991) was a German Shepherd police dog who played Jerry Lee in the 1989 movie K-9 with James Belushi. He also starred in a short lived TV series of the same name. Prior to being in the movie/TV series, Koton worked for the Kansas City Police Department as a K-9 officer.
K-9 was successful at the box-office. It was met with mixed critical reception, but was praised for its use of comedy and for the dog training that was done for the animal actors that portrayed Jerry Lee. [2] The sequels were criticized for their pacing, [3] their "strain[ed] credibility"; [4] and for the use of potty humor. [5]
A police dog in South Carolina has been shot dead during a pursuit and now three teenagers are under arrest. Bumi the police K-9 was killed on Dec. 23 as deputies with the Richland County Sheriff ...
The film serves as the fourth and final installment in the K-9 film series; and is the sequel to K-911. After retiring from the LAPD, Detective Michael Dooley (Belushi) and his lovable K-9 Partner Jerry Lee go on one last adventure before they retire and start to enjoy the good life.
Jerry Lee Lewis, the untamable rock ‘n’ roll pioneer whose outrageous talent, energy and ego collided on such definitive records as “Great Balls of Fire” and “Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin ...
Jerry Lee Lewis at New York’s Madison Square Garden on March 14, 1975. Sure, what made Lewis’ music rock was the concise construction his best best-known hits (“Great Balls of Fire ...
During the movie, Jerry Lee becomes tired, and begins to fail doing his normal way of life. They also reluctantly team up with Sergeant Wendy Welles and her Doberman Pinscher , Zeus, who, according to Welles, was trained in the Netherlands and listen to commands in Dutch (although in reality the commands are in German).