Tag: bad boys

  • Best Buddy Cop Movies Of All Time Ranked

    (L to R) Jason Momoa and Dave Bautista star in 'The Wrecking Crew'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Jason Momoa and Dave Bautista star in ‘The Wrecking Crew’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Premiering on Prime Video beginning January 28th is the new buddy cop movie ‘The Wrecking Crew,’ starring Jason Momoa (‘Aquaman’) and Dave Bautista (‘Guardians of the Galaxy‘).

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    In honor of the new film, Moviefone is counting down the top 20 best buddy cop movies of all time.

    Editorial Note: The criteria to be included on this list is that at least one of the two main characters in the film is either a current cop, a former cop, or a private detective.  

    Let’s begin!

    Related Article: Jonathan Tropper Talks ‘The Wrecking Crew’ and ‘Star Wars: Starfighter’


    20. ‘Ride Along‘ (2014)

    (L to R) Kevin Hart and Ice Cube in 'Ride Along'. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    (L to R) Kevin Hart and Ice Cube in ‘Ride Along’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    For the past two years, high-school security guard Ben (Kevin Hart) has been trying to show decorated APD detective James (Ice Cube) that he’s more than just a video-game junkie who’s unworthy of James’ sister, Angela (Tika Sumpter). When Ben finally gets accepted into the academy, he thinks he’s earned the seasoned policeman’s respect and asks for his blessing to marry Angela. Knowing that a ride along will demonstrate if Ben has what it takes to take care of his sister, James invites him on a shift designed to scare the hell out of the trainee. But when the wild night leads them to the most notorious criminal in the city, James will find that his new partner’s rapid-fire mouth is just as dangerous as the bullets speeding at it.

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    19. ‘Money Train‘ (1995)

    When a vengeful New York transit cop (Woody Harrelson) decides to steal a trainload of subway fares, his foster brother (Wesley Snipes), a fellow cop—tries to protect him.

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    18. ‘21 Jump Street‘ (2012)

    When cops Schmidt (Jonah Hill) and Jenko (Channing Tatum) join the secret Jump Street unit, they use their youthful appearances to go undercover as high school students. They trade in their guns and badges for backpacks, and set out to shut down a dangerous drug ring. But, as time goes on, Schmidt and Jenko discover that high school is nothing like it was just a few years earlier — and, what’s more, they must again confront the teenage terror and anxiety they thought they had left behind.

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    17. ‘Stakeout‘ (1987)

    Two detectives (Richard Dreyfuss and Emilio Estevez) observe an escaped convict’s ex-girlfriend (Madeleine Stowe), but complications set in when one of them falls for her.

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    16. ‘The Presidio‘ (1988)

    Jay Austin (Mark Harmon) is now a civilian police detective. Colonel Caldwell (Sean Connery) was his commanding officer years before when he left the military police over a disagreement over the handling of a drunk driver. Now a series of murders that cross jurisdictions force them to work together again. That Austin is now dating Caldwell’s daughter (Meg Ryan) is not helping their relationship.

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    15. ‘The Wrecking Crew‘ (2026)

    (L to R) Jason Momoa and Dave Bautista star in 'The Wrecking Crew'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Jason Momoa and Dave Bautista star in ‘The Wrecking Crew’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Estranged half-brothers Jonny (Jason Momoa) and James (Dave Bautista) reunite after their father’s mysterious death. As they search for the truth, buried secrets reveal a conspiracy threatening to tear their family apart.

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    14. ‘Turner & Hooch‘ (1989)

    Detective Scott Turner (Tom Hanks) has three days left in the local police department before he moves to a bigger city to get some ‘real’ cases—not just misdemeanors. When Amos Reed (John McIntire) is murdered, Scott sets himself on the case, but the closest thing to a witness to the murder is Reed’s dog, Hooch, which Scott has to take care of—to avoid Hooch being ‘put to sleep’.

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    13. ‘Rush Hour‘ (1998)

    When Hong Kong Inspector Lee (Jackie Chan) is summoned to Los Angeles to investigate a kidnapping, the FBI doesn’t want any outside help and assigns cocky LAPD Detective James Carter (Chris Tucker) to distract Lee from the case. Not content to watch the action from the sidelines, Lee and Carter form an unlikely partnership and investigate the case themselves.

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    12. ‘The Other Guys‘ (2010)

    Unlike their heroic counterparts on the force, desk-bound NYPD detectives Gamble (Will Ferrell) and Hoitz (Mark Wahlberg) garner no headlines as they work day to day. When a seemingly minor case turns out to be a big deal, the two cops get the opportunity to finally prove to their comrades that they have the right stuff.

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    11. ‘The Nice Guys‘ (2016)

    A private eye (Ryan Gosling) and an enforcer (Russell Crowe) investigate the apparent suicide of a fading porn star in 1970s Los Angeles and uncovers a conspiracy.

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    10. ‘Running Scared‘ (1986)

    (L to R) Gregory Hines and Billy Crystal in 'Running Scared'. Photo: MGM Entertainment Co.
    (L to R) Gregory Hines and Billy Crystal in ‘Running Scared’. Photo: MGM Entertainment Co.

    Two street-wise Chicago cops (Billy Crystal and Gregory Hines) have to shake off some rust after returning from a Key West vacation to pursue a drug dealer (Jimmy Smits) that nearly killed them in the past.

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    9. ‘Die Hard: With a Vengeance‘ (1995)

    New York detective John McClane (Bruce Willis) is back and kicking bad-guy butt in the third installment of this action-packed series, which finds him teaming with civilian Zeus Carver (Samuel L. Jackson) to prevent the loss of innocent lives. McClane thought he’d seen it all, until a genius named Simon (Jeremy Irons) engages McClane, his new “partner” — and his beloved city — in a deadly game that demands their concentration.

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    8. ‘Bad Boys‘ (1995)

    Marcus Burnett (Martin Lawrence) is a henpecked family man. Mike Lowrey (Will Smith) is a footloose and fancy free ladies’ man. Both Miami policemen, they have 72 hours to reclaim a consignment of drugs stolen from under their station’s nose. To complicate matters, in order to get the assistance of the sole witness (Téa Leoni) to a murder, they have to pretend to be each other.

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    7. ‘Tango & Cash‘ (1989)

    Ray Tango (Sylvester Stallone) and Gabriel Cash (Kurt Russell) are two successful narcotics detectives who can’t stand each other. Crime lord Yves Perret (Jack Palance), furious at the loss of income they have caused him, plots an elaborate revenge against them.

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    6. ‘Miami Vice‘ (2006)

    A case involving drug lords and murder in South Florida takes a personal turn for undercover detectives Sonny Crockett (Colin Farrell) and Ricardo Tubbs (Jamie Foxx). Unorthodox Crockett gets involved romantically with the Chinese-Cuban wife (Gong Li) of a trafficker of arms and drugs, while Tubbs deals with an assault on those he loves.

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    5. ‘Kiss Kiss Bang Bang‘ (2005)

    (L to R) Val Kilmer and Robert Downey Jr. in 'Kiss Kiss Bang Bang.' Photo: Warner Bros.
    (L to R) Val Kilmer and Robert Downey Jr. in ‘Kiss Kiss Bang Bang.’ Photo: Warner Bros.

    A petty thief (Robert Downey Jr.) posing as an actor is brought to Los Angeles for an unlikely audition and finds himself in the middle of a murder investigation along with his high school dream girl (Michelle Monaghan) and a detective (Val Kilmer) who’s been training him for his upcoming role.

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    4. ‘Lethal Weapon 2‘ (1989)

    Riggs (Mel Gibson) and Murtaugh (Danny Glover) are on the trail of South African diplomats using their immunity to engage in criminal activities.

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    3. ‘The Last Boy Scout‘ (1991)

    Somewhere in Los Angeles, the city of broken dreams, a stripper (Halle Berry) is murdered. Now, the private detective (Bruce Willis) she had hired and her ex-footballer boyfriend (Damon Wayans) are going to find her murderer, if they don’t kill each other first. But the more they dig, the deeper they become enmeshed in a web of extortion, blackmail and corrupt politics hidden beneath the surface of professional football.

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    2. ‘Midnight Run‘ (1988)

    A bounty hunter and former-cop (Robert De Niro) pursues a former Mafia accountant (Charles Grodin) who is also being chased by a rival bounty hunter (John Ashton), the F.B.I. (Yaphet Kotto), and his old mob boss (Dennis Farina) after jumping bail.

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    1. ‘48 Hrs.‘ (1982)

    (L to R) Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy in '48 hrs.' Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy in ’48 hrs.’ Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    A hard-nosed cop (Nick Nolte) reluctantly teams up with a wise-cracking criminal (Eddie Murphy) temporarily paroled to him, in order to track down a killer (James Remar).

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  • New ‘Men in Black’ Movie in the Works at Sony

    (L to R): Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith in 'Men in Black.' Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R): Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith in ‘Men in Black.’ Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Preview:

    • Sony is developing a new ‘Men in Black’ movie.
    • ‘Bad Boys for Life’ writer Chris Bremner is at work on the script.
    • The studio is hoping Will Smith might return.

    ‘Men in Black’ is one of those legacy franchise that Sony doesn’t want lingering on a shelf. Despite a less-than-successful attempt to expand it via 2019’s Chris Hemsworth-starring ‘Men In Black: International,’ the studio is trying again with a new movie.

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    And on the heels of success with revisiting the ‘Bad Boys’ franchise, ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’ and ‘Bad Boys for Life’ co-writer Chris Bremner is now aboard to craft this next potential entry, per Deadline.

    Related Article: Will Smith Starring in New Sony Sci-Fi Thriller ‘Resistor’

    What’s the story of ‘Men in Black’?

    Will Smith in 'Men in Black.' Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Will Smith in ‘Men in Black.’ Photo: Sony Pictures.

    The original 1997 movie –– which was a huge hit, and one of those that helped cement Will Smith as a star –– adapted the graphic novel whose concept was of a police force on Earth that kept the planet safe from alien issues, and managed extraterrestrial residents.

    Smith starred as the wise-cracking Agent J, recruited from the NYPD, who partnered up with Tommy Lee Jones’ grumpy K.

    2002’s ‘Men in Black II’ wasn’t as big of a success, but it still did well, and was followed by 2012’s ‘Men in Black 3’, which introduced time travel.

    As mentioned, ‘Men in Black: International’, which looked to extend the story in new directions, wasn’t embraced by audiences on the same level.

    What will the new ‘Men in Black’ movie be about?

    (L to R): Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith in 'Men in Black.' Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R): Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith in ‘Men in Black.’ Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Details are few and far between as to exactly how Bremner’s effort will continue the story. Will it look to craft another chapter, a la ‘International,’ or will it stay within the confines of the usual ‘MIB’ New York world? We’ll have to wait and see.

    According to Deadline, the draft that’s currently being written will include Agent J somehow, and that Smith will be among the first to see it (since he’ll want approval of any screenplay before he considers signing on), but there’s no word on whether that means he’ll be the focus again or if it’ll be more along the lines of ‘Tron: Ares’ where an original star simply cameos.

    When will the new ‘Men in Black’ movie be in theaters?

    Sony has yet to confirm it’s even in the works yet, let alone assigning this one a release date.

    (L to R): Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith in 'Men in Black.' Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R): Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith in ‘Men in Black.’ Photo: Sony Pictures.

    List of Will Smith Sci-Fi Movies:

    Buy Will Smith Movies on Amazon

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  • Will Smith May Reunite with Michael Bay for ‘Fast and Loose’

    (Left) Will Smith attends the European premiere of 'Bad Boys: Ride Or Die' at Zoo Palast on May 27, 2024 in Berlin, Germany. Photo by Sebastian Reuter/Getty Images for Sony Pictures. (Right) Michael Bay attends the Los Angeles Premiere of Columbia Pictures' 'Bad Boys: Ride Or Die' at the TCL Chinese Theater on May 30, 2024 in Hollywood, California. Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Sony Pictures.
    (Left) Will Smith attends the European premiere of ‘Bad Boys: Ride Or Die’ at Zoo Palast on May 27, 2024 in Berlin, Germany. Photo by Sebastian Reuter/Getty Images for Sony Pictures. (Right) Michael Bay attends the Los Angeles Premiere of Columbia Pictures’ ‘Bad Boys: Ride Or Die’ at the TCL Chinese Theater on May 30, 2024 in Hollywood, California. Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Sony Pictures.

    Preview:

    • ‘Bad Boys’ collaborators Will Smith and Michael Bay may be working together again.
    • Bay is considering directing the action thriller ‘Fast and Loose.’
    • Smith would star as a man with amnesia.

    Way back in the distant mists of time (okay, 1995) an action comedy about wayward, chaos-causing cops roared on to screens.

    It launched the big screen directing career of a young, hungry filmmaker who to that point had been toiling away in the lower rungs of movie departments and handling music videos and commercials.

    The film also cemented the stardom of a rising talent who had broken out on a TV sitcom and graduated to the likes of ‘Independence Day.’

    Yes, ‘Bad Boys’ was the movie, Michael Bay the director, and Will Smith the star. While they re-teamed for the first sequel in 2003, and Bay remained a producer for (plus made cameos in) two further follow-ups, the pair has not worked together since.

    That could all change with Netflix action thriller ‘Fast & Loose.’

    Related Article: Will Smith Starring in New Sony Sci-Fi Thriller ‘Resistor’

    What’s the story of ‘Fast & Loose’?

    Will Smith in Columbia Pictures 'Bad Boys: Ride of Die.'
    Will Smith in Columbia Pictures ‘Bad Boys: Ride of Die.’ Photo: Frank Masi. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    With a script that has seen contributions from Jon Hoeber, Erich Hoeber, Chris Bremner and Eric Pearson, ‘Fast and Loose’ follows John Riley (Smith), who wakes up in Tijuana after being left for dead with absolutely no memory.

    Riley follows a string of clues to uncover his identity discovering he’s been living two different lives: one, as a super-successful crime kingpin, surrounded by beautiful women, expensive toys, and a lavish lifestyle, and the other as an undercover CIA agent, but with a puny salary, no family or home life whatsoever, and zero trappings of success. The problem is, he can’t remember which of these two personas is his true identity…

    What’s the history of ‘Fast and Loose’?

    David Leitch in Paris for 'Bullet Train.'
    David Leitch in Paris for ‘Bullet Train.’ Credit: Oliver Vigerie/Sony Pictures.

    Smith has been attached to this one for some time –– previously, ‘The Fall Guy’ director David Leitch was attached to make the movie, but he dropped out of the big chair in the wake of Smith’s slapping incident with Chris Rock at the 2022 Oscars, when Netflix hit pause on the project.

    Leitch and his producing partner Kelly McCormick are still aboard to produce the movie alongside Smith, but now it looks like Bay will be calling the shots (and, if we know anything about his work, the explosions.)

    Now Smith, according to Deadline, has dropped out of another big action movie, ‘Sugar Bandits’ to focus on this one and Netflix is hoping that Bay’s deal locks in.

    Bay has experience with Netflix already –– he made action pic ‘6 Underground’ for the streaming service, and his most recent movie, ‘Ambulance,’ is a big hit with its viewership.

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    When would ‘Fast and Loose’ be on screens?

    With no solid deal in place for Bay and no official start date, it’s too early to even ponder when this might land on Netflix’s servers.

    Producer Brad Fischer, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Director/Producer Michael Bay, Eiza González and Jake Gyllenhaal attend Universal Pictures 'Ambulance' Premiere at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles, CA on Monday, April 4, 2022.
    (L to R) Producer Brad Fischer, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Director/Producer Michael Bay, Eiza González and Jake Gyllenhaal attend Universal Pictures ‘Ambulance’ Premiere at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles, CA on Monday, April 4, 2022. Photo: Alex J. Berliner/ABImages.

    Other Michael Bay Movies:

    Buy Michael Bay Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’ Digital Release: Joe Pantoliano

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    Available on digital to buy and rent beginning July 23rd is ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die‘, which is the fourth movie in the popular ‘Bad Boys’ franchise and was directed by ‘Bad Boys for Life’ filmmakers Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah.

    The latest installment once again stars Oscar-winner Will Smith (‘King Richard’) and Martin Lawrence (‘Big Momma’s House’), as well as Vanessa Hudgens (‘Sucker Punch’), Alexander Ludwig (‘The Hunger Games’), Eric Dane (‘X-Men: The Last Stand’), Ioan Gruffudd (‘Fantastic Four’), Jacob Scipio (‘Expend4bles’), Tiffany Haddish (‘Night School’), Rhea Seehorn (‘Better Call Saul’), Melanie Liburd (‘Brian Banks‘) and Joe Pantoliano (‘The Fugitive’) as Captain Conrad Howard.

    'Bad Boys: Ride or Die' star Joe Pantoliano on June 05, 2024 in Miami, Florida.
    ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’ star Joe Pantoliano on June 05, 2024 in Miami, Florida. Photo by Alexander Tamargo/Getty Images for Sony Pictures Entertainment.

    Related Article: Movie Review: ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with veteran actor Joe Pantoliano about his work on ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’, returning after his character’s death in ‘Bad Boys for Life’, Captain Howard’s love for Mike and Marcus, working with Smith and Lawrence again, shooting his scenes, and his respect for directors Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Pantoliano and Melanie Liburd.

    'Bad Boys: Ride or Die' star Joe Pantoliano on June 05, 2024 in Miami, Florida.
    ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’ star Joe Pantoliano on June 05, 2024 in Miami, Florida. Photo by Alexander Tamargo/Getty Images for Sony Pictures Entertainment.

    Moviefone: To begin with, your character was killed off in ‘Bad Boys for Life’, how surprised were you to discover you would be retuning for ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’?

    Joe Pantoliano: I wasn’t going to give them any opportunity to change their mind. “Yes, sir. May I have another?”

    MF: What was it like for you to return and have a chance to play Captain Howard one more time?

    JP: Oh, it was great. It was brief. I was working on something else, and I needed to get back, I was doing a play. So, they accommodated my schedule. It was a whirlwind, but it turned out to be so very good.

    Will Smith and Martin Lawrence star in Columbia Pictures 'Bad Boys: Ride of Die.'
    (L to R) Will Smith and Martin Lawrence star in Columbia Pictures ‘Bad Boys: Ride of Die.’ Photo: Frank Masi. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Can you talk about Captain Howard’s love and respect for Mike and Marcus, and the trust that he’s given to them over the years?

    JP: It’s a natural trajectory that played into the chemistry. In a lot of ways, it reflected our own personal journey as actors, as people, and as humans. I got to know those guys when they were kids, and then started families, and grown up in a way that I’m very proud of them as professionals and as humans.

    MF: What was it like getting to work with Will Smith and Martin Lawrence again?

    JP: It’s just very easy.

    MF: Can you talk about shooting the “After Life” scene with Martin Lawrence?

    JP: It was fascinating, because it was blue screen, and the equipment that they use. When Marcus goes back into the bed and the clothes get torn off. The equipment boggles my mind, it boggles my imagination. The forty-some years that I’ve been doing this, the idea that focus pullers can now be 200 yards away from the camera, it just boggles my mind. So, I was just like a kid in a candy store, seeing how they do all this stuff and having no idea how it gets pulled off.

    Directors Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah on the set of Columbia Pictures 'Bad Boys: Ride of Die.'
    (L to R) Directors Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah on the set of Columbia Pictures ‘Bad Boys: Ride of Die.’ Photo: Frank Masi. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Finally, you began making these films with director Michael Bay but what has it been like working with Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah on these last two ‘Bad Boys’ movies?

    JP: They have a childlike quality about them, and enthusiastically, and Michael Bay is one of their hugest fans. They’re huge fans of Michael Bay. So, to pay homage to what Michael created, and they adore him, and they think about that, and their collaboration with Robrecht Heyvaert, the cinematographer who’s extraordinarily creative in his own right. So, it’s a combination of the three of them. Fascinating. It’s like being a student of filmmaking, you just watch this stuff, and you go, “Wow, how did they do it?”

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    What is the plot of ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’?

    When the late Captain Howard (Joe Pantoliano) is implicated in a longstanding string of drug-related crimes, the Bad Boys — Mike Lowrey (Will Smith) and Marcus Burnett (Martin Lawrence) — attempt to clear his name, only to find themselves framed as well. With a bounty on their heads, they’re forced to go on the run from the drug cartel, the local gangs, and their fellow officers in the Miami PD.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’?

    • Will Smith as Detective Mike Lowrey
    • Martin Lawrence as Detective Marcus Burnett
    • Vanessa Hudgens as Kelly
    • Alexander Ludwig as Dorn
    • Paola Nuñez as Captain Rita Secada
    • Eric Dane as James McGrath
    • Ioan Gruffudd as Lockwood
    • Jacob Scipio as Armando Aretas
    • Joe Pantoliano as Captain Conrad Howard
    Martin Lawrence and Will Smith in 'Bad Boys: Ride or Die.'
    (L to R) Martin Lawrence and Will Smith in ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die.’ Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing.

    Movies and TV Shows in the ‘Bad Boys’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Bad Boys’ Movies On Amazon

     

     

  • Movie Review: ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’

    Will Smith and Martin Lawrence star in Columbia Pictures 'Bad Boys: Ride of Die.'
    (L to R) Will Smith and Martin Lawrence star in Columbia Pictures ‘Bad Boys: Ride of Die.’ Photo: Frank Masi. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Opening in theaters June 7th is ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die,’ directed by Adil El Arbi & Bilall Fallah and starring Will Smith, Martin Lawrence, Vanessa Hudgens, Alexander Ludwig, Paola Nuñez, Ioan Gruffudd, Eric Dane, Jacob Scipio, and Joe Pantoliano.

    Related Article: ‘Bad Boys 4’ Officially in Pre-Production with Directors Adil El Arbi Bilall Fallah Back

    Initial Thoughts

    Will Smith and Martin Lawrence star in Columbia Pictures 'Bad Boys: Ride of Die.'
    (L to R) Will Smith and Martin Lawrence star in Columbia Pictures ‘Bad Boys: Ride of Die.’ Photo: Frank Masi. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    No one was more surprised than us when we walked out of 2020’s ‘Bad Boys for Life’ having enjoyed the film. Especially coming some 17 years after the unpleasant ‘Bad Boys II,’ and with Michael Bay abdicating the director’s chair to Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah (credited as Adil & Bilall), the third entry in the franchise was as mayhemic (if not Bayhemic) as ever, but actually offered up some character development, a decently structured plot, and yes, plenty of eye-watering yet well-staged action and violence, not to mention the undeniable Will Smith-Martin Lawrence chemistry.

    Flash forward five years and it seems the ‘Bad Boys’ franchise has actually flashed back a bit: ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’ is more frenzied, sillier, and more mind-numbing than its predecessor. The returning Adil & Bilall (along with encoring screenwriter Chris Bremmer, this time working with Will Beall, whose less-than-sparkling credits include ‘Gangster Squad’ and ‘Aquaman’) seem to be leaning into the style of the first two ‘Bad Boys’ entries, and while Smith and Lawrence still have their act down, it’s starting to feel a little like a parody of itself. ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’ still manages to be fairly entertaining, but it feels like eating too much of a meal you weren’t even sure you wanted.

    Story and Direction

    Directors Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah on the set of Columbia Pictures 'Bad Boys: Ride of Die.'
    (L to R) Directors Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah on the set of Columbia Pictures ‘Bad Boys: Ride of Die.’ Photo: Frank Masi. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    You want story? ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’ gives you plenty – or least piles on incidents and plot points like a wobbly Jenga game. Just in the first 15 minutes alone, perennial bachelor and lead Bad Boy Mike Lowrey (Will Smith) gets hitched – a lot happened in the last four years, we guess – while his partner in detective work and destruction, Marcus Burnett (Martin Lawrence) has a heart attack while dancing at Mike’s wedding. A near-death vision of the late Captain Howard (Joe Pantoliano, picking up a paycheck) convinces Marcus to channel his inner Jeff Bridges circa ‘Fearless’ and walk on the ledge of the hospital roof after he recovers, while we also discover that Mike is now suffering from panic attacks – you know, the kind that always pop up at critical life-or-death moments in a movie like this.

    It turns out that Marcus’ vision isn’t the last we’ll see of Joey Pants; after it comes out that Captain Howard is, for some reason, being investigated after his death for colluding with the drug cartels, Mike and Marcus are sent a recording that Howard made before his death in which he says he’s the one who’s been investigating the corruption and it goes all the way up the food chain of Miami P.D. and perhaps higher. That, it turns out, is the real reason why he was shot to death by Mike’s illegitimate son Armando (Jacob Scipio) in ‘Bad Boys for Life,’ in a neat bit of comic-book-style retconning.

    Before you can say ‘plot contrivance,’ Mike and Marcus find themselves targeted for investigation, while the real villains – a shadowy militia unit led by former DEA officer and cartel prisoner James McGrath (Eric Dane) – are setting them up as well, placing a bounty on their heads with every gang in Miami. Soon the Bad Boys are on the run, joined along the way by Armando, who has been sprung from federal prison to help his father catch the true conspirators.

    Martin Lawrence and Will Smith star in Columbia Pictures 'Bad Boys: Ride of Die.'
    (L to R) Martin Lawrence and Will Smith star in Columbia Pictures ‘Bad Boys: Ride of Die.’ Photo: Frank Masi. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    All of this, as well as the increasingly chaotic action, Smith and Lawrence’s banter breaks, and the introduction or re-introduction of a lot of characters we don’t really need, is presented almost as an ongoing recap of the movie you’re watching as you watch it.

    Adil & Bilall move everything along at breakneck speed, with one scene practically butting into another before the previous one is finished, and while there’s a certain energy to it all, it also feels numbing after a while. Mike and Marcus seem to get out of almost every situation they’re in, making the stakes feel less substantial than they are, and for the grand climax at an abandoned amusement park (complete with 16-foot alligator still lurking on the grounds), the pair all but assemble their own version of the Avengers for the big shootout, even including high-tech battle drones.

    Yes, the movie is insane, more so than ‘Bad Boys for Life,’ but we can’t say we weren’t intermittently entertained along the way. When we can actually see the action (it feels far more muddled this time than in ‘For Life’), some of it’s quite exciting: perhaps the best moment is when Marcus’ Marine son-in-law Reggie (Dennis McDonald) takes on 15 assassins by himself in a clear audition for ‘Bad Boys: The Next Generation’ (Jacob Scipio’s Armando seems to be auditioning for that project as well). And while a lot of the jokes fall kind of flat, there are a few laugh-out-loud moments here as well.

    The Cast

    Martin Lawrence and Will Smith star in Columbia Pictures 'Bad Boys: Ride of Die.'
    (L to R) Martin Lawrence and Will Smith star in Columbia Pictures ‘Bad Boys: Ride of Die.’ Photo: Frank Masi. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    This is only Will Smith’s second film (following the ill-fated ‘Emancipation’) to arrive after the infamous Oscar slap that was heard around the world. While it kind of works for Lowrey, who has at least shown some character growth in the series, Smith seems to have lost some of his usual infectious energy here and comes across a bit muted. He’s still a compelling presence, and while he still has that chemistry with Lawrence, he (or his character) seems more impatient with the latter this time out.

    As well he should: Lawrence is embarrassing. His Marcus is more or less played as a complete fool now, whether he’s standing bare-assed on a roof or immersed in hip-deep water while facing an alligator. Lawrence still manages to get off a few good lines (“He’s racist!” he exclaims after his confrontation with the gator doesn’t end well) and when he focuses, he can play off Smith well, but focus is his problem: Marcus is less a character and more a collection of pratfalls and extended bits that go nowhere.

    The problem with the rest of the cast – aside from the fact that there are too many of them — is that they either don’t get time to do much or have their true nature telegraphed far too early in the film. Vanessa Hudgens’ Kelly, Alexander Ludwig’s Dorn, and Paola Nuñez’s Rita Secada (who’s now the Bad Boys’ captain) are simply the support system for the stars, while other returning cast members (and one returning filmmaker) just show up for glorified cameos. Only Armando, Lowrey’s son, has something resembling a character arc this time out, and the dynamic between father and son provide the film’s fleeting moments of genuine emotion and introspection.

    Final Thoughts

    Martin Lawrence and Will Smith star in Columbia Pictures 'Bad Boys: Ride of Die.'
    (L to R) Martin Lawrence and Will Smith star in Columbia Pictures ‘Bad Boys: Ride of Die.’ Photo: Frank Masi. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    But c’mon, you don’t come to a ‘Bad Boys’ movie for introspection, right? As we said earlier, this is a movie that is overstuffed – with plot, with characters, with action, with crazy camera moves. It starts at around 60mph and quickly escalates from there, but there’s simply never enough time for the viewer to truly feel anything (and since most of it was filmed in Georgia, the Miami flavor and bouncing soundtrack set the scene but never quite suffuse the movie).

    Nevertheless, there’s just enough action and, in the third act, suspense to keep us going for two hours. Smith is certainly still watchable, even if Lawrence has become a chore. When Adil & Bilall get the mix of violence, character, and comedy right – as they did in ‘For Life’ – this can be an entertaining buddy-cop crowd-pleaser. At the very least, the ‘Bad Boys’ franchise seems to be the last one standing in a once-popular genre that has since fallen on hard times. But this cinematic fast-food meal might leave you feeling full and empty at the same time.

    ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’ receives 6 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’?

    When the late Captain Howard (Joe Pantoliano) is implicated in a longstanding string of drug-related crimes, the Bad Boys — Mike Lowrey (Will Smith) and Marcus Burnett (Martin Lawrence) — attempt to clear his name, only to find themselves framed as well. With a bounty on their heads, they’re forced to go on the run from the drug cartel, the local gangs, and their fellow officers in the Miami PD.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Bad Boys: Ride or Die’?

    • Will Smith as Detective Mike Lowrey
    • Martin Lawrence as Detective Marcus Burnett
    • Vanessa Hudgens as Kelly
    • Alexander Ludwig as Dorn
    • Paola Nuñez as Captain Rita Secada
    • Eric Dane as James McGrath
    • Ioan Gruffudd as Lockwood
    • Jacob Scipio as Armando Aretas
    • Joe Pantoliano as Captain Conrad Howard
    Will Smith and Martin Lawrence star in Columbia Pictures 'Bad Boys: Ride of Die.'
    (L to R) Will Smith and Martin Lawrence star in Columbia Pictures ‘Bad Boys: Ride of Die.’ Photo: Frank Masi. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Movies and TV Shows in the ‘Bad Boys’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Bad Boys’ Movies On Amazon

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  • Will Smith Officially Confirms Fourth ‘Bad Boys’

    https://www.instagram.com/p/CoFkzJDpP39/

    “Bad Boys, Bad Boys, wotcha gonna do?” If you’re Will Smith and Martin Lawrence, apparently you’re gonna make a fourth movie in the successful action comedy franchise.

    Yes, with Will Smith seemingly persona grata again despite that little incident at last year’s Oscar ceremony, the actor took enthusiastically to Instagram for a new video which included him driving to Martin Lawrence’s house to announce that a fourth ‘Bad Boys’ is indeed now in the works.

    Featuring a funny moment where the pair realize that it might have been a mistake to call the last movie ‘Bad Boys for Life’ (since ‘Bad Boys 4 Life’ would really work for this one), it’s mostly the excited actor teasing fans about what he’s actually announcing.

    Martin Lawrence as Detective Lieutenant Marcus Miles Burnett and Will Smith as Detective Lieutenant Michael Eugene 'Mike' Lowrey in 'Bad Boys for Life.'
    (L to R) Martin Lawrence as Detective Lieutenant Marcus Miles Burnett and Will Smith as Detective Lieutenant Michael Eugene ‘Mike’ Lowrey in ‘Bad Boys for Life.’

    But whatever it ends up being called, the fourth film will see the return of directors Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah, who oversaw that last movie, which ended up being one of the few movies released in 2020 ahead of the incoming pandemic and making more than $426 million worldwide. So of course Sony and producer Jerry Bruckheimer would want to try and get another going.

    ‘Bad Boys For Life’ saw an older Mike (Smith) and Marcus (Lawrence) tackling their latest case, a mother-son drug trafficking duo who proved to be a dangerous threat.

    Nothing is yet known about what the cops will be dealing with this time, but the script will come from ‘For Life’s Chris Bremner. And we’re all but guaranteed cars crashing and things blowing up, plus comedy squabbling between our heroes. Will anyone be slapped? Let’s find out!

    It’s certainly better news for the directors, who have had mixed fortunes of late. Following the praise and box office bonanza of ‘For Life’, they were in demand, squeezing in indie movie ‘Rebel’, worked on episodes of ‘Ms. Marvel’ (which boasted a fun visual style) and also cranked out ‘Batgirl’ with high hopes for more cinematic success.

    eslie Grace, co-director Adil El Arbi, and Michael Keaton on the set of 'Batgirl.'
    (L to R) Leslie Grace, co-director Adil El Arbi, and Michael Keaton on the set of ‘Batgirl.’ Photo courtesy of Adil El Arbi’s Instagram.

    Yet ‘Batgirl’ not only fell victim to Warner Bros. Discovery cost-cutting, consigned to the shelf when still in post-production.

    And the knocks have kept coming. The movie, which stars Leslie Grace, Brendan FraserJ.K. Simmons, and Michael Keaton has now been described as “ not releasable” by producer and DC Studios co-CEO Peter Safran. Having spent a couple of months figuring out the future of the DC movie, TV and video game universe with James Gunn––who outlined their plans yesterday––Safran was doing press for the big new announcement when he was asked about the ‘Batgirl’ situation.

    “I saw the movie,” he said. “There are a lot of incredibly talented people in front of and behind the camera in that film, but that was not releasable. It happens sometimes. “I think [Warner Discovery CEO David] Zaslav and the team made a bold and courageous decision to cancel it, because it would have hurt DC and those people involved. I spoke to Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah last week. We’d love to be in business with all of them.”

    It’s an unusually candid answer for a controversial subject, especially about a movie that plenty of fans still want to see. But perhaps El Arbi and Fallah will get a do-over at DC. Once they finish wrangling Smith and Lawrence, that is.

    Directors Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah from Disney+’s ‘Ms. Marvel.’
    Directors Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah from Disney+’s ‘Ms. Marvel.’
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  • Studios Pausing Will Smith Projects in Wake of Oscar Incident

    Will Smith at Oscars
    94th Oscars® nominee Will Smith at the 94th Oscars® at the Dolby Theatre at Ovation Hollywood in Los Angeles, CA, on Sunday, March 27, 2022. Photo credit: Blaine Ohigashi / A.M.P.A.S.

    The fallout of the most infamous Oscar incident for years continues to be felt in Hollywood. A week since Will Smith strode on stage to slap comedian Chris Rock after the latter made a joke about Smith’s wife Jada Pinkett Smith and her bald head – a reaction to alopecia – studios are curbing their enthusiasm for working with the actor.

    While Smith has been attempting damage control in the wake of the slap – he apologized while accepting his Best Actor Oscar for ‘King Richard’ and then again – including Rock – on his Instagram page. And then he resigned from the academy ahead of any potential sanction from the group (he’s still likely to face disciplinary action from there and his acting union, SAG-AFTRA).

    But that hasn’t been enough to make studios and streamers want to stay in business with him in the wake of the incident.

    Netflix had set up a crime thriller called ‘Fast and Loose’ with Smith aboard to star and ‘Deadpool 2’s David Leitch directing. The movie planned to tell the story of a crime boss (Smith) who loses his memory after an attack. Piecing together clues, he discovers that he has led a double identity as a wealthy kingpin and a broke CIA agent.

    Leitch had pulled out of directing coincidentally before the Oscar weekend (according to The Hollywood Reporter’ because a project at Universal called ‘Fall Guy’ with Ryan Gosling starring had moved ahead in his schedule), but Netflix, confident that Smith would end up winning Best Actor, had started an urgent hunt for a replacement filmmaker to keep the movie on track.

    Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith
    Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith during the live ABC telecast of the 94th Oscars® at the Dolby Theatre at Ovation Hollywood in Los Angeles, CA, on Sunday, March 27, 2022. Photo Credit: Al Seib / A.M.P.A.S.

    Yet now, ‘Fast and Loose’ is firmly on the back burner, at least in terms of Smith’s involvement. The company may well aim to have it up and running again with a new duo but appears happy to let the dust settle first.

    Similar, Sony had been looking to get a fourth installment of the ‘Bad Boys’ franchise moving as quickly as possible following the box office success of ‘Bad Boys for Life’, which became one of the biggest earners in 2020 before the pandemic tool hold.

    Smith had reportedly received script pages for the movie ahead of the Oscars, with the movie in active development, but all that is now on pause. The next ‘Bad Boys’ represents even more of a challenge than ‘Fast and Loose’, since Smith is (alongside Martin Lawrence) one of the recognizable icons of the franchise.

    And then there are the variety of other projects that Smith was attached to, movies in different stages of development (the ‘Bright’ sequel and a remake of ‘Planes, Trains & Automobiles’ among them) as both actor and, to a far greater degree, producer. It remains to be seen whether they move ahead without them, or, in the cases where he’s just a producer, quietly remove his name or proceed anyway.

    Right now, it appears few people want to be in the Will Smith business. How long that will continue is anyone’s guess at this point.

    Will Smith accepts the Oscar® for Actor in a Leading Role
    Will Smith accepts the Oscar® for Actor in a Leading Role during the live ABC telecast of the 94th Oscars® at the Dolby Theatre at Ovation Hollywood in Los Angeles, CA, on Sunday, March 27, 2022. Photo Credit: Blaine Ohigashi / A.M.P.A.S.
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  • ‘Bad Boys 3’ First Look Reunites Will Smith and Martin Lawrence

    ‘Bad Boys 3’ First Look Reunites Will Smith and Martin Lawrence

    Sony

    Reunited and it feels so good! Will Smith and Martin Lawrence are back together again to make “Bad Boys 3.”

    Smith shared the first look at the two stars on the set of “Bad Boys For Life,” the long-awaited follow-up to the first two hit movies. The Boomerang image is appropriately set to P. Diddy’s 2001 track “Bad Boys For Life.”

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BtQsG6aB4rZ/?utm_source=ig_embed

    The plot of the third installment is rumored to find Marcus Burnett (Lawrence) as a private investigator, with Mike Lowrey (Smith) still a police officer. But they team up once again when a bounty is placed on their heads by an Albanian mercenary whose brother was killed by the former partners.

    Joe Pantoliano returns as Captain Howard, and DJ Khaled and Vanessa Hudgens join the cast. Directors Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah take over from Michael Bay.

    “Bad Boys For Life” opens in theaters January 17, 2020.

  • ‘Bad Boys 3’ Production Could Be on Track to Start in Early 2019: Report

    ‘Bad Boys 3’ Production Could Be on Track to Start in Early 2019: Report

    Bad Boys
    Columbia Pictures

    Dare we say the will they, won’t they of “Bad Boys 3” seems to be moving in the direction fans want?

    The long-awaited sequel is likely to get a green light soon, Variety reports. Now, to be fair, we’ve heard that before — Will Smith said in December 2016 that the film was “very, very, very close” — yet this time, there may be good reason to hope it really is. Word is that Will Smith is already on board, Martin Lawrence is in talks, and production could start as soon as early 2019.

    Sony declined to comment on the news, as Variety reported, so nothing is official. Nonetheless, we’re cautiously optimistic. “Bad Boys 3” was previously set for a January 2020 release date, and production kicking off in early 2019 seems to be in line with keeping that scheduled date.

    There have been a lot of starts and stops for “Bad Boys” fans over the years, but we just keep hoping the sequel is eventually going to come for us.

    [via: Variety]

  • Why ‘Bad Boys II’ Is the Nastiest Hollywood Blockbuster Ever

    Sony

    When “Bad Boys” was released in 1995, it was far from a sure thing.

    Budgeted at a mere $19 million, the mismatched buddy action movie starred a pair of unproven sitcom actors that the studio wasn’t keen on (Martin Lawrence and Will Smith) and was helmed by Michael Bay, a young, first-time filmmaker best known for his flashy commercials and music video work (none of which showed a particular strength for narrative storytelling). But “Bad Boys” defied the odds, making a whopping $141 million worldwide and spawning “Bad Boys II,” released 15 years ago this week.

    Looking back, the film feels somewhat ahead of its time, especially considering how many overdue, mega-budget sequels are storming the multiplexes (“Bad Boys II” arrived eight years after the original, costing $130 million more than its predecessor), but it also stands out as the nastiest, most mean-spirited blockbuster Hollywood has ever unleashed. Still.

    For some reason, even though the film has three credited writers, the runtime is a flabbergasting 147 minutes. (For those of you playing at home, this is a half-hour longer than the first film.) But what to fill such a whopping runtime? Well, as it turns out, uncontrollable filth.

    Take the opening sequence, for instance, which — after some incredibly flashy exposition involving Amsterdam drug dealers and some cartoonish Hispanic drug lords — we are inserted into, of all things, a Ku Klux Klan rally (amongst the hooded masses: a young Michael Shannon!) And Bay really goes full out — there are the robes, the burning crosses, the bucktoothed hillbillies. It’s more alarming to see in our even-more-racially-splintered 2018, but 15 years ago it was still a shock.

    The comedic payoff of this sequence, of course, is that Lawrence and Smith reveal themselves to be playing the part of white supremacists, with Smith unloading his double barrels into the baddies.

    Sony

    The bloodshed is spectacular, in the sense that it is photographed with an almost pornographic attention to detail by Bay and his cinematographer Amir Mokri, but also because the director turns each bullet hole into a spectacle. Each shot is like a gory Fourth of July fireworks display.

    This level of ultraviolence isn’t out of the ordinary if you’re watching, say, South Korean genre cinema or some extreme Japanese horror film. But in a mainstream American film that, despite its R rating, was marketed to the widest possible audience (including those too-young viewers that would be drawn to it anyway), the violence is positively shocking. And it continues throughout the rest of the movie, culminating with a shot of the villain’s exploding head that wouldn’t be out of place in a David Cronenberg movie.

    It’s not just the violence, though, that makes “Bad Boys II” a singularly mean-spirited experience. Even more egregious is the film’s threatment of women, beginning in that opening montage, when a floozy retrieves a drug lord’s handgun, accidentally firing off a shot. The drug lord (Jordi Molla), turns towards camera and utters a phrase unrepeatable on a family website.

    Women are seen as being unable to make their own decisions (as in the prolonged, mostly unnecessary subplot about Smith dating Lawrence’s adult sister) and mostly just as objects. In a scene set in an Amsterdam club, the camera glides underneath short skirts and hangs around lasciviously as the same women (donned in see-through shirts) take drugs. Later on, in a scene that goes on forever, a nude woman’s corpse is turned into a bizarre fetish object for the male characters to leer at. (Honestly, how this movie avoided an NC-17 rating is anybody’s guess.)

    Sony

    And yet the most offensive scene might be a moment when Lawrence, concerned about his teenage daughter going out on a date (the horror!), decides to intimidate her would-be suitor. He and Smith open the door, throw around the N-word and imply homosexual rape. It was a sequence that so deeply offended Roger Ebert, that he made it the crux of his one-star review, citing the scene’s “needless cruelty.” Somehow, he found it even more objectionable than the high-speed chase that involved naked bodies flying out of a hearse and exploding on the pavement below.

    It would be one thing if “Bad Boys II,” which, in addition to the N-word and F-word, makes frequent racial jabs and homophobic remarks, was mean-spirited in a singular way. But the fact is that it’s a toxic bouillabaisse of debased and morally questionable ideas, concepts, and images. It’s a scummy, oftentimes witless attempt at edginess and modernity. 15 years later, it is even nastier.

    But here’s the thing — and it really does pain me to say this — watching “Bad Boys II” is also an oftentimes transporting experience. (Bay, as a craftsman, is at the top of his game and many of the shots are downright jaw-dropping.)

    And its mean-spiritedness, while certainly a spiritual shortcoming, acts to set it apart from so much squeaky clean, homogenic Hollywood product. “Bad Boys II” is unquestionable rude, crude, and unacceptable, but it’s also something of a bad taste breakthrough, a moment when the mainstream was seized, with slick artfulness, and thrown into a cauldron of moral bankruptcy.

    It’s not for everyone. And it might not be for anyone. But it’s undeniably “Bad Boys II.”