Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F
I love the original Beverly Hills Cop. It came at the apex of Murphy's star power, a time that gave us all-time classics like Trading Places, 48 Hours, up to Coming to America. After that, his role choices faltered and his star dimmed. I'll just leave the transvestite trolling to lie here like a dead fish.
Ten years after the original Beverly Hills Cop premiered, Murphy rolled out Cop 3. It wasn't terrible, but it really diminished the brand.
Now, 40 years after the original, 20 years post III, comes Beverly Hills Cop (4): Axel F. Available to stream on Netflix.
It's more of an homage to the beginning, hauling back almost all of the original cast including Serge, Rosewood, Taggart, and Jeffery. No Lisa Eiibacher taking on the Jenny role, though. I think she retired from the business altogether.
Much of the original music is interspersed throughout the film, albeit a few of the pieces modernized.
Murphy's Foley goes through the same basic pattern as the original. Crashing and smashing through Detroit, on the verge of being suspended. Called to LA due to someone he's close to being in danger (in this case a daughter we knew nothing about who SHOULD have been mentioned at some point in Cop III if she actually existed, because she's 32 and would have been 12 at that time).
Once in LA, more fish out of water scenes, more carnage, more stolen vehicles and chases, more going rogue outside the law, more dragging Taggert, Rosewood along. This time add Joseph Gordon Levitt (a detective) and whoever is playing his daughter (a lawyer) and their romantic chemistry to the outside the law rampage.
The Levitt/daughter romance seemed a little forced. So too did the "I messed up but I wanna be your daddy" sideline.
Still, it hewed more closely to the original (as well as 2) that it was an enjoyable nostalgic film.
Taggart and Rosewood looked much worse for wear. Murphy - except for the fact that he cannot run any longer - has not aged as badly. I get it. He's older than me. I couldn't do a running after the bad guy scene if I had to. So I don't begrudge that.
The best part to me was when Foley went to a hotel to do one of his patented scams to get a room and then stopped saying "You know what? I'm too tired for this... Do you have a room?" That kinda hit home. Am I really trying to do the same ridiculous crap I was doing when I was 23?
It won't change the world, but I enjoyed the film for what it was. I took it as a retirement party for the main three characters. At that? It wasn't a bad way to go out.