The Verdict: Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F.

Axel Foley is back! 40 years after the original and 30 years after the disappointing third movie, Foley enters the era of streaming. Some things have changed while other things remained the same. ‘The Heat Is On’ and the Axel F. theme by Harold Faltermeyer are still there and sound as catchy as ever. Eddie Murphy is back as well and his Axel can still do all these fantastic character impressions to get things done. The movie also sees the return of the original loved supporting characters, including Taggart who wasn’t even in the third one. Beverly Hills itself is pretty much the same as well: a five star resort for the rich and fabulous. Then some differences: these guys surely have aged although Murphy obviously took some Beverly Hills style cosmetic measures to hide it. It is a bit uncanny to see especially Eddie Murphy and Judge Reinhold (Billy Rosewood) as these two old geezers. Two new players in the Beverly Hills Police Department are played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Kevin Bacon. Good calls! There is not really a main bad guy though, so that must mean… You get the picture. Storywise, it is all very familiar. Foley returns to Beverly Hills to solve a case. The only difference is that Foley now has an estranged daughter who is working as a lawyer there. Since she is threatened by the same bad guys from Foley’s case, this gives him the opportunity to catch two birds with one stone. Three even, because he has some amends to make to his daughter. I was a bit worried about this movie, because keeping legendary heroes alive for too long isn’t always a good idea (see Indiana Jones for example), but in this case it worked: the humor, the action and most importantly the chemistry are still there.

Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F. is now available on Netflix

The verdict: to stream or not to stream? To stream

Beverly Hills Cop Revisited

On July 1, Netflix released Beverly Hills Cop: Alex F, exactly 30 years after Beverly Hills Cop III was released. To celebrate, FilmDungeon checked out the original trilogy which was an enjoyable trip down memory lane.

Beverly Hills Cop (1984, Martin Brest)

The tune is great, his laugh is a riot, and his inventive tricks to get things done are inspiring. Eddie Murphy stars as the wise-ass Detroit cop who goes to Beverly Hills to investigate the murder of his friend. He quickly makes new friends, including detective Billy Rosewood (Judge Reinhold) and sergeant John Taggart (John Ashton) who both return in the new movie! He makes plenty of enemies too because not everybody loves Axel’s freewheeling style. In Beverly Hills everything is done by the book, which clashes with his street smart ways. This is the basic gimmick of the first movie and it works like a charm. Murphy is in top form here, delivering funny wisecracks rapid fire style. The banana in the tailpipe is still hilarious and the traffic light gag that follows it is even better. If the new movie can capture any of this comedy magic, it will be fantastic. Let’s hope so…

Beverly Hills Cop II (1987, Tony Scott)

The second movie sees many of the cast and crew members return. Only directing duties were taken over by Tony Scott who had just delivered Top Gun (produced by Jerry Bruckheimer and Don Simpson, who also produced the first two Beverly Hills Cop movies). When his friend Andrew Bogomil (Ronny Cox) is shot, Foley returns to Beverly Hills to help solve the so-called Alphabet Crimes, a series of expertly carried out robberies. There is a new Chief of Police, and he is the biggest asshole of all time and arguably the film’s greatest villain. Murphy still has all these ‘types’ he can play to get things done, and they are often pretty funny. Only the script is poor, and some jokes didn’t age particularly well. But the dynamics between Foley, Taggert and Rosewood is still great, and Rosewood’s development to gun-toting, Rambo-style hero, is hilarious. These are the best two things about this sequel.

Beverly Hills Cop III (1994, John Landis)

More bad guys, more guns, more violent kills, but less humor. The third film in the series was written by Steven E. de Souza, the screenplay writer of Die Hard and Die Hard 2, and he turned it into Die Hard in an amusement park. Only since many of the action scenes would be too expensive, they turned the action down and made it more about Axel’s investigation taking place in an amusement park. Boring! Worse still, Murphy told new director John Landis that he preferred to play Axel as a more mature character. Bronson Pinchot, who reprises his role of Serge from the first film here, later said Murphy was pretty depressed during the shoot. It shows on the screen: Murphy’s performance comes across as mostly joyless. The film does deliver the series most dangerous villain with Ellis DeWald, played perfectly by Timothy Carhart. Still, overall this third entry was a letdown, so let’s hope Beverly Hills Cop: Alex F rocks the house again, so the series can conclude on a high note after all.