The Borneo Post

‘Bad Boys for Life’ proves that the third time’s the charm

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MICHAEL Bay didn’t direct ‘Bad Boys for Life,’ but in ways expected and unexpected his spirit lurks in the third installmen­t of the franchise that started with his feature debut, the 1995 odd-couplebudd­y-cop-comedy-thriller ‘Bad Boys.’

That was way back before the filmmaker was even a brand — a brand now most associated with loud, crass, action-packed blockbuste­rs epitomized by five ‘Transforme­rs’ movies.

Early in the new film, Bay appears in a quickie cameo during a wedding scene in which the daughter of family man Marcus (Martin Lawrence) - one half of the film’s titular detective duo, along with his playboy partner Mike (Will Smith) - is getting married.

It’s Marcus who’s giving away the bride, but it’s Bay, who briefly handles a microphone, in the uncredited role of emcee/ wedding planner, who seems to be spirituall­y handing over the reins of the franchise to the two kids who took over directing duties from the action veteran: Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah, the 30-ish, Moroccan-born Belgian filmmaking duo who broke out with ‘Black,’ a street-wise take on ‘Romeo and Juliet,’ and who made Variety’s list of 10 directors to watch in 2018.

The young co-directors, who are billed, in the casual manner of their generation, simply as Adil and Bilall, bring a breath of fresh air and fun energy to a franchise that felt somewhat stale, even 25 years ago, when the first film was likened, not inaccurate­ly, to a carbon copy of ‘Lethal Weapon.’

Adil and Bilall aren’t reinventin­g the wheel here. “Bad Boys for Life” is very much in the spirit of the first two films — cacophonou­s, at times prepostero­us, hyperviole­nt, coarse, silly — but a quarter of a century on from ‘ Bad Boys,’ it both acknowledg­es and punctures the absurdity of two 50-ish men, slower, more thickly upholstere­d versions of their former selves, as action heroes. There was always a contrast drawn between Smith’s Mike, the badder, more often shirtless of the two, and the married, more cautious and conservati­ve Marcus, who as ‘ Bad Boys for Life’ gets underway is itching to retire, while Mike is dedicating himself to tracking down a Mexican assassin (Jacob Scipio) who is methodical­ly executing a list of Miami justice system bigwigs: a judge, a prosecutor, a forensics expert.

The good-natured tension and ribbing between the two old “boys” is still there — and still a bit old hat — but there is a new dynamic that juices the entertainm­ent factor. Mike is forced to work with a new, high-tech team of young operatives dubbed AMMO (for Advanced Metro Miami Operations). Led, of course, by an old flame of Mike’s (Paola Nuñez), the three-person squad (Vanessa Hudgens, Alexander Ludwig and Charles Melton) demonstrat­es a borderline snotty disrespect for their elders that is, in the context of a sequel like this, extremely healthy.

Where Mike’s policing style is old-school — he extracts informatio­n from a civilian informant (DJ Khaled) by whacking the guy’s knuckles with a meat tenderizer - AMMO’s methodolog­y involves weaponized surveillan­ce drones, cracking cellphone call logs and other, more generally bloodless tools of 21stcentur­y law enforcemen­t.

The banter between Mike and the members of the AMMO crew lends the film a crackling humor that goes a long way toward defusing the frequent - and sometimes disturbing­ly dark - mayhem that characteri­zes this movie.

During the film’s climax, which takes our heroes to a creepy, decaying Mexican hotel decorated with the trappings of Santa Muerte (‘Holy Death’), a folkloric female personific­ation of the Grim Reaper, Marcus refers to a “darkness that swallows you whole.”

 ?? Columbia Pictures — Photos by ?? Martin Lawrence (left) and Will Smith star in ‘Bad Boys for Life.’
Columbia Pictures — Photos by Martin Lawrence (left) and Will Smith star in ‘Bad Boys for Life.’
 ??  ?? Martin Lawrence (left) and Will Smith in a scene from ‘Bad Boys for Life.’
Martin Lawrence (left) and Will Smith in a scene from ‘Bad Boys for Life.’

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