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Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F review – The heat is on… again

Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F review – The heat is on… again
Nasim Pedrad as Ashley de la Rosa, Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Detective Bobby Abbott, Taylour Paige as Jane, Bronson Pinchot as Serge and Eddie Murphy as Axel Foley in Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F. (Photo: Melinda Sue Gordon/Netflix © 2024)
With an appreciably old-school approach that makes it feel like Murphy and co have not missed a day despite the three-decade gap since we last saw them, Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F is a comfortable, nostalgic romp. It may not be groundbreaking, but it is fun.

Stuck in development hell for decades, Eddie Murphy’s fourth Beverly Hills Cop movie is finally here. 

As Glenn Frey’s “The Heat is on” blasts through your speakers while Axel Foley engages in a wantonly destructive car chase with a snowplow – all filmed by director Mark Molloy with an appreciably retro practicality – you may as well have stepped into a time machine. There have been no reports of digital de-aging tech being employed, but it’s the only explanation for how Murphy still looks and moves the way he does. 

The 63-year-old actor has miraculously not missed a beat in the 30 years since we last saw Axel on screen. His returning co-stars Judge Reinhold, John Ashton and Paul Reiser can’t quite say the same thing, but screenwriter Will Beall leans into this instead of having us believe all these old guys discovered Murphy’s fountain of youth.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KoxhkE_U3Ww

It is not all fan-service casting though. There are some new additions to the franchise, most notably Taylour Paige, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and Kevin Bacon. And it’s Paige’s Jane Saunders, Axel’s grown-up daughter who now lives in Beverly Hills, who is at the centre of the film’s narrative.

It has been three decades since the Wonder World incident (“Not your finest work”, a character remarks in a bit of meta-commentary on the poorly received Beverly Hills Cop 3), and Foley is still a detective working the streets of Detroit. After his latest bit of motorised mayhem results in his longtime friend Deputy Chief Jeffrey Friedman (Reiser) being pressured into retiring, it is suggested that Axel take time off to reconnect with Jane, to whom he has not spoken for years. 

Grave danger


Taken under the tutelage of Axel’s friend Billy Rosewood (Reinhold) – who has retired from the Beverly Hills Police Department and turned PI – Jane is now a high-profile criminal defence attorney. And as Axel is informed telephonically by Rosewood, Jane’s latest case, defending a young man accused of killing an undercover cop, has placed her in grave danger.

Mark Pellegrino as Beck, Kevin Bacon as Captain Cade Grant, and James Preston Rogers as Kurtz in Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F. (Photo: Andrew Cooper/Netflix © 2024)



After an attempt on Jane’s life, Axel heads out to Beverly Hills only to discover that Billy has gone missing while looking into the case. Axel turns to his other friend and Rosewood’s old partner John Taggart (Ashton), now the Beverly Hills Police Department chief, for help, but he’s more interested in introducing Axel to Captain Cade Grant (Bacon), his erstwhile golden boy protégé and now the head of the BHPD narcotics task force. Grant is far too slick and expensively attired for Axel’s liking, and it’s not long before something begins to smell rotten in the state of California.

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Teaming up with a reluctant Jane and local detective Bobby Abbot (Gordon-Levitt) – Jane’s ex-boyfriend, much to her father’s chagrin – Axel has to uncover the conspiracy at the heart of the BHPD. 

The filmmakers know that a Beverly Hills Cop movie, even a modern one, doesn’t need to go crazy with its story twist; the scripts of these affairs have always been rather straightforward. The mysteries are never too deep; the ramifications never too widespread, and once again that’s the case here. 

Cultural landmarks


For longtime fans, this will feel like slipping into that old band T-shirt you had to dig out of the back of the cupboard, and finding it still fits perfectly. Mileage may vary for modern audiences raised on $200 million globetrotting Netflix green-screen fests, where one painfully good-looking A-lister betrays another every few minutes as they blow various cultural landmarks to smithereens.

To be fair, Axel F could have done with just a bit more bombast on the action side. Molloy, an Australian commercials director prior to stepping behind the camera here, does nothing wrong, but there’s also not much that is particularly cool and memorable. Bad Boys for Life directing duo Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah were once attached to helm Beverly Hills Cop 4 in one of its many past iterations, and they probably would have put a much more dynamic spin on things.

Left to right: Nasim Pedrad as Ashley de la Rosa, Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Detective Bobby Abbott, Taylour Paige as Jane, Bronson Pinchot as Serge and Eddie Murphy as Axel Foley in Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F. (Photo: Melinda Sue Gordon/Netflix © 2024)



It’s a good thing then that Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F is very much more Murphy’s movie than it is Molloy’s. Also wearing the producer’s hat, this has been a decades-long passion project for the star, and the commitment shows. Axel’s hugely entertaining motormouth shenanigans, as he talks himself into and out of trouble, is vintage Murphy, right down to the R-rated language.

Outside of Samuel L Jackson, no other actor in Hollywood can deliver a foul-mouthed barb with quite the same comedic effect (a trademark of Murphy’s early stand-up comedy days), and he’s perfectly in his element here.

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It’s not all F-bombs and shoot-outs though.

There’s also a subplot of Axel and Jane overcoming their personal drama and reconnecting as family, and again Murphy delivers the goods – it is a strong reminder of why he was once one of Hollywood’s top leading men. The much less experienced Paige doesn’t quite match his emotional consistency though, and she also doesn’t quite have a spark with the underutilised Gordon-Levitt.

It’s these kinds of missteps and a few silly plot beats, along with the aforementioned mundanity of the action, that keep Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F from being the blow-out blockbuster that Netflix wants it to be. What viewers do get is a nostalgic throwback that doesn’t just rely on said nostalgia for a good time. 

It’s not often that franchise revivals this long in the tooth get things right, and it must have been some of that fast-talking Axel Foley magic that made it happen. DM

Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F is out now on Netflix. This story was first published on PFangirl.

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