"Miami Vice" Freefall (TV Episode 1989) Poster

(TV Series)

(1989)

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10/10
The end of Miami Vice
Tweekums10 May 2013
Warning: Spoilers
If you are watching the series on DVD save this episode till last as the DVD keeps the episode in broadcast order which is a pity as this is meant to be the last ever episode.

This series finale sees Crockett and Tubbs press-ganged into working for a federal agency which wants then to help General Borbon, a Latin American dictator, get out of his country before the revolutionaries take over. They say they want to help him escape because he has information which could help shut down the Columbian cartels bringing drugs into Miami. This is plausible as the cartels are determined that Borbon will stay in his country; which means killing those trying to help him escape. When Crockett and Tubbs head south they find themselves in a dangerous situation; their supposed allies don't seem at all trustworthy… in fact it seems they only people they can trust are the revolutionaries! Even when they get Borbon and his daughter back to America their problems aren't over; the Columbians still want him dead and there is a leak which means Crockett and Tubbs continue to be in danger.

As the eighties drew to a close so did one of its most stylish series; the epitome of '80s cool; 'Miami Vice'. After a somewhat disappointing fifth season I was pleased that the series got a top notch send off. Earlier episodes clearly suffered from a lower budget but it is clear this one had no such problems. There is plenty of action from start to finish including car chases, numerous gun fights and several explosions. It isn't all action without meaning though; the story is solid and there is an emotional intensity as our protagonists are forced to consider whether they wish to serve in the police any longer. Don Johnson and Phillip Michael Thomas put in the expected fine performances as Crockett and Tubbs roles they will always be best known for. Guest star Ian McShane put in a decent performance as General Borbon but it little difficult for a British viewer to see this well-known English actor as a Central American general… his tan made him look the part at least!

It is a sad that the series couldn't continue but it was probably for the best that it finished with this fine episode rather than continuing with weaker and weaker episodes till it became rubbish or trying to replace key actors who were clearly ready to move on at this point.
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10/10
As fitting as it can be!
dangkoen12 April 2008
As I was gone through seasons 1, 2, 3 & 4 over a short period of months, I finally was able to buy the released season 5. I must admit during this season I was looking forward to the final. Mainly because the season foreshadowed that Sonny would certainly get killed or leave the force. This thanks to the strong scenes and music in the particular season.

And so, finally, came the final. I was surprised at how good it was. It had to be the best series final I had ever seen in my whole life! OK, so maybe they should have brought back a villain with whom the Vice cops still had a score to settle, but I was satisfied with the main villain anyway. The only criticism I have is that they underused the two leading females and didn't tie up all the loose ends.

But in the end, it was a fitting final to a great show, probably my favorite show ever! Offcourse, I will keep rewatching all the seasons of Vice, and certainly each time, when I watch the final, I will look forward to the moment where the most legendary cop duo of all time bid each other farewell!
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10/10
The perfect way to wrap up a series.
edwardjamessmith18 February 2008
By season five, Miami Vice had radically changed. Jan Hammer had left, the budget was very tight, the style had got much darker and violent, the ratings were not good at all and Don Johnson wasn't in very many episodes (due to working big time in Hollywood on major motion pictures). The season finale "Freefall" is a perfect finale to the series because it shows the political problems which were going on in Latin America during the 80's and completely different compared to 2 part episodes like "Calderone's Return", "The Prodigal Son" & "Down For The Count". The action's good and so's the setting, etc... The scene with the Ferrari testarossa speeding down the streets of Miami with the song "Bad Attitude" by Honeymoon Suite works because it's re-showing the defining image from the pilot episode with the Daytona driving through the night down down the streets with the song "In the air tonight" by Phil Collins playing that introduced us to Miami Vice in the first place. It was the right time to end the show because if it had carried on into the nineties, it wouldn't have been the same. Miami Vice was only for the 80's and that's where it belonged. Rating 10/10, "Freefall" is one of the greatest finales to a series that I've seen and it showed that Miami Vice could wrap it up with a bang.
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10/10
What can I say?
kitteninbritches1 March 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Re-watching this on dvd many years after seeing it on TV and I was amazed at how sad I felt. No complaints about the action-plenty of it- though it would be easy to get confused about the various bad guy motives.....but though the ending was foreshadowed several times in earlier episodes in that the stress of the job was taking its toll on Crockett and Tubbs, I had the nagging feeling that somehow it was incomplete. Tubbs intended to head back to the Bronx (to do what, he didn't specify but obviously not in a police role) and Crockett was even more vague (he intended to go further south" Where the water's warm, the drinks are cold and he didn't know the names of the players.") which is all very well but there isn't a great deal further south in Florida as far as I know where he could live a satisfying life. Both men had shown the viewer through over a hundred hours of Miami Vice that they weren't the type who'd be settling down in an office job with a wife and kids, however burned out and disillusioned with their police roles they'd become. So they seemed like two displaced people with no objective to aim for that would satisfy their essential personalities and needs. I felt like I knew these two after all this time spent with them and was uncomfortable that they seemed to be heading into an unknown and uncertain future with no guarantee of happiness or satisfaction. Also the emotional depth of their parting was impressive but if they felt so strongly about it, did they need to part at all? Very moving as it was but I'd have written it differently.
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Lousy wrap up to a great series!!
HawksRevenge7 April 2006
Miami Vice for all intended purposes ran out of gas at the end of the fourth season with the exception of the completion of the 3-part arc in which Sonny Crockett lost his memory and became a murdering thug which they should have stretched the fourth season to include Season five was complete garbage and the **Freefall** finale is reduced to a 10 minute clip scene at the end, and even to my enemies I wouldn't recommend watching this **Freefall** garbage as this is **Tired Vice** Without a doubt Miami Vice was the show to watch in the 80's, but you can only compare Miami Vice season five with Wiseguy season four, obviously somebody thought it was a good idea What a waste!!
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6/10
Series finale rating: A big "Meh"
daviddiepusc-922696 February 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Planes exploding from small arms fire. Castillo, absent for nearly the entire episode, flying out of nowhere as his favorite detectives are about to quit. Gina and Trudy have a total of 1 minute screen time. Crockett and Tubs get into suicide situations for no explanable reason except because the script calls for it.

Some series get better over time, but not this one. Do yourself a favor, only buy seasons 1 through 3.

Seasons 1 through 3 = awesome. Great writing, great direction, great cinematography.

Season 4 = Crap on a hot Miami afternoon, Dick Wolf sucks.

Season 5 = Better than season 4, but to little, to late.
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4/10
Feel asleep during this one guys!
mm-393 September 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Feel asleep during this one guys! Well ... well well Miami Vice wraps up the series with a two hour final. The series was running out of gas. Getting away from Don Johnson roles and trying other characters to develop stories. Some worked most not! There were a few memorable episodes. Asian cut etc! Regrettably many episodes were dogs. Freefall was the final that fits in with the dogs episode. The acting was done well, but short on story and budget. Too t v movie ish. Choppy, cheese, disjointed or rushed many of the scenes. Lacking on story, and uses real life clips I found Freefall lacking form the moive quality of the first four years. Closing a series is hard to do, and Vice ending hits the profile of series running out of steam. Like Mash and many others memorable t v series the makers did not know how to end a great series in a big way. 4 out 10 stars.
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