Beverly Hills Cop Movie Review
Beverly Hills Cop Review
"Beverly Hills Cop" Overview

Rating: R
1984
Cast and Crew
Director : Martin BrestProducer : Jerry Bruckheimer,Don Simpson
Screenwiter : Daniel Petrie Jr.
Starring : Eddie Murphy,Judge Reinhold,John Ashton,Lisa Eilbacher,Ronny Cox,Steven Berkoff,James Russo
Boy, looking back at Berverly Hills Cop, almost 20 years after its original
release, it's easy to see why people fell in love with the movie, earning a
then unheard-of of $316 million worldwide (the highest grossing R-rated movie
ever) and propelling Eddie Murphy from a funny ensemble player in films like
Trading Places and 48 HRS. to a megastar.
Beverly Hills Cop is actually a bit of a nutty idea -- combine a standard cop
actioner with a fish out of water tale. Who would've thought that would be any
good? But it works, and how, with Murphy turning in perhaps his funniest
performance ever -- mocking the supporting cast at every turn (favorite
targets: gay men, uptight men, and gay/uptight men) and tossing off one-liners
like he's got a wad of them stuffed in his pocket. His Axel Foley, one of the
most widely impersonated characters in film (remember the popularity of the
"Mumford Phys. Ed." sweatshirt?), heads from rough-and-tumble Detroit to
prim-and-proper Beverly Hills to investigate the murder of his best friend,
uncovering a much bigger plot, of course.
Judge Reinhold, as a rather hapless junior cop in L.A., made enough of a mark
here to carry a career of duds for a full decade, and the soundtrack, including
the ubiquitous instrumental "Axel F," was full of what would become 1980s smash
hits. If the plot wasn't such a throwaway, Cop might have stood as one of the
greatest action comedies ever made, but it does stand as Murphy's funniest work
and the inspiration for dozens of knockoffs (including two throwaway sequels,
each worse than the last).
At last, Cop comes to DVD, with commentary by Martin Brest (suitably shocked at
his own success), plus a smattering of interviews and other extras. If the
comedy doesn't get you, the nostalgia certainly will. Recommended.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





