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  • Post last modified:November 28, 2020

Beverly Hills Cop: Action-Comedy Blueprint

THE HEAT IS ON!

Not long ago there was a story about a fourthĀ Beverly Hills CopĀ movie being planned. I donā€™t think anyone greeted the news with enthusiasm, but there was definitely a time when Eddie Murphy was sitting on top of the world, as Rolling Stone Magazine once put it. In 1984, Murphy was already a big-time movie star thanks to the success ofĀ 48HRS.Ā (1982) andĀ Trading PlacesĀ (1983);Ā Beverly Hills CopĀ became his third hit and by far his biggest. The film also pretty much defined the concept of action-comedies for years to come.

An undercover cop in Detroit
When we first meet Axel Foley (Murphy), heā€™s working as an undercover cop in Detroit, great at his job but constantly finding new ways of landing himself in trouble. When an old friend of his, Mikey (James Russo), comes to town for a visit, a night out ends tragically when Mikey is murdered in cold blood. Axelā€™s boss tells him to stay out of the investigation, but he takes some time off and goes to Beverly Hills where Mikey worked for Victor Maitland, an art dealer. Axel visits Maitland in his office to learn more about what Mikey was doing for him, but is thrown out by Maitlandā€™s thugs and promptly arrested by the Beverly Hills police department. Axel is impressed by the clean squad cars and the polite manners of the police officersā€¦ but refuses to heed any warnings regarding Maitland.

As heā€™s doggedly followed by two detectives, John Taggart (John Ashton) and Billy Rosewood (Judge Reinhold), Axel enlists help from another childhood friend, Jenny Summers (Lisa Eilbacher), in his quest to bring Maitland to justice.

Not much blood but quite a body count
Murphyā€™s first scene clearly establishes him as the star of the film. He never stops talking and he knows how to exploit white peopleā€™s fear of being accused of racism; you can even tell from his eyes that he knows that heā€™s full of shit but as long as he doesnā€™t stop talking no one will notice. Heā€™s hilarious and owns his character one hundred percent. Murphyā€™s particularly great together with Ashton and Reinhold, two significantly more conservative cops who are constantly the butt of Axelā€™s jokes; the latter has a lot of charm as the enthusiastic, innocent part of the duo.

As for laughs, Bronson Pinchot also does his part as a gay art gallery worker whose accent is so thick that he’s even upstaging Murphy in his scenes (ā€œAchwell?ā€). The story is as simple as they come; thereā€™s no doubt that Maitland (Steven Berkoff, chewing the scenery) is a murderous villain and in his first encounter with Axel he does his best, inexplicably enough, to convince him of that fact. And, of course, the Beverly Hills authorities are too dumb to listen to our hero. But who cares? The audience is instantly committed to Axelā€™s quest and the escalating war between him and Maitland is exciting, ending in a violent shootout at the villainā€™s swank home.

There isnā€™t much blood in the film, but quite a body count nonetheless. Harold Faltermeyerā€™s electronic score (and particularly his terrific ā€œAxel Fā€ theme) is just as perfect an accompaniment as the unusually successful pop soundtrack that makes great use of songs by Glenn Frey, Patti LaBelle and the Pointer Sisters. Those tunes were all major hits.

Great movies can come out of stressful situations. This project, though, had been discussed for a decade until director Martin Brest took the helm. The last film he had made was in 1979, so it had been a while. At least on paper, this looked as a carefully produced, thoughtful hit. As a genre piece, it is still a role model that young directors should be required to study.

Beverly Hills Cop 1984-U.S. 105 min. Color. Produced byĀ Don Simpson, Jerry Bruckheimer. Directed byĀ Martin Brest. Screenplay: Daniel Petrie, Jr. Ā Music: Harold Faltermeyer. Cast: Eddie Murphy (Axel Foley), Judge Reinhold (Billy Rosewood), John Ashton (John Taggart), Lisa Eilbacher, Ronny Cox, Steven Berkoff… Paul Reiser, Damon Wayans.

Trivia:Ā Sylvester Stallone and Mickey Rourke were reportedly considered for the part of Axel Foley; David Cronenberg for directing duties. Followed by two sequels, starting withĀ Beverly Hills Cop IIĀ (1987).

Quote:Ā ā€œDonā€™t you think I know that if I was some hotshot from out of town that pulled inside here and you guys made a reservation mistake, Iā€™d be the first one to get a room and Iā€™d be upstairs relaxing right now. But Iā€™m not some hotshot from out of town, Iā€™m a small reporter from ā€˜Rolling Stoneā€™ magazine thatā€™s in town to do an exclusive interview with Michael Jackson thatā€™s gonna be picked up by every major magazine in the country. I was gonna call the article ā€˜Michael Jackson Is Sitting On Top of the World,ā€™ but now I think I might as well just call it ā€˜Michael Jackson Can Sit On Top of the World Just As Long As He Doesnā€™t Sit in the Beverly Palm Hotel ā€˜Cause Thereā€™s No Niggers Allowed in There!ā€™ā€ (Murphy trying to get a hotel room)

Last word: “I’m a comedian who got into movies, so I don’t really think of myself as an actor. I started out as a stand-up comedian. And that’s what I’m most comfortable doing. Making movies is time-consuming and it’s boring. You spend most of your time waiting between takes. It’s like a big machine that moves slowly. And you have to work in what you do with what somebody else is doing. It all has to fit together. Now that’s cool something. Like in the ‘Cop’Ā movies, Judge [Reinhold] and John [Ashton] and I were comfortable improvising, and it took off somewhere. But that doesn’t always happen. When I’m doing stand-up, it’s just me depending on me. I know how to go out there and make people laugh.” (Murphy, Interview Magazine)

 

IMDb

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