The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

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

- By Michael O'Sullivan

The young co-directors of “Bad Boys for Life,” Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah, 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 Will Smith’s Mike, the badder, more often shirtless of the two, and Martin Lawrence’s 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 (D J 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 21st-century 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.” It’s a reference to a key plot twist that gives “Bad Boys for Life” a subtext that is a bit heavier than what fans of the series might be used to. But the script, by Chris Bremner, Joe Carnahan and Peter Craig, always stays just this side of truly, deeply unsettling.

Mike, for his part, characteri­zes that same plot twist with a euphemism, saying that he has a “history” with a certain character. But at this point, he has a history with lots of characters: not just Marcus, but their now gray-haired police captain ( Joe Pantoliano, who, of course, returns — how could he not?).

It is that history that Adil and Bilall both honor and gleefully flip off here. Like their cinematic forebear Michael Bay, they told Variety that they hope one day to become a brand. With this film in the can, a sequel hinted at in its ending, and discussion­s underway with producer Jerry Bruckheime­r for directing “Beverly Hills Cop 4,” they’re already well on their way.

 ?? BEN ROTHSTEIN/COLUMBIA PICTURES ?? Martin Lawrence, left, and Will Smith star in “Bad Boys for Life.”
BEN ROTHSTEIN/COLUMBIA PICTURES Martin Lawrence, left, and Will Smith star in “Bad Boys for Life.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States