Beverly Hills Cop II

Beverly Hills Cop II

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Tony Scott
Produced by Don Simpson
Jerry Bruckheimer
Screenplay by Larry Ferguson
Warren Skaaren
Story by Eddie Murphy
Robert D. Wachs
Based on Characters created by
Danilo Bach
Daniel Petrie, Jr.
Starring Eddie Murphy
Music by Harold Faltermeyer
Cinematography Jeffrey L. Kimball
Edited by Chris Lebenzon
Billy Weber
Michael Tronick
Production
company
Simpson/Bruckheimer
Eddie Murphy Productions
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release dates
  • May 20, 1987
Running time
102 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $20,000,000[1]
Box office $299,965,036[2]

Beverly Hills Cop II is a 1987 action comedy film starring Eddie Murphy and directed by Tony Scott. It is the first sequel in the Beverly Hills Cop series. Murphy returns as Detroit police detective Axel Foley, who reunites with Beverly Hills detectives Billy Rosewood (Judge Reinhold) and John Taggart (John Ashton) to stop a robbery/gun-running gang after Captain Andrew Bogomil (Ronny Cox) is shot and seriously wounded.

Although it made less money than the original Beverly Hills Cop and received mixed reviews from critics, the film was still a box office success, making $153,665,036 domestically. Aside from box office success, the film was nominated for an Academy Award and for a Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song, for the Bob Seger song "Shakedown".

Plot

Beverly Hills Police Captain Andrew Bogomil, Detective Billy Rosewood, and Sergeant John Taggart are trying to figure out who is behind the "Alphabet Crimes," a series of mostly high end store robberies distinguished by their monogrammed envelopes with an alphabetical sequence the assailants leave behind. Complicating matters is the new "political" state of the Beverly Hills Police Department, headed by incompetent and verbally abusive new police chief Harold Lutz, who is doing everything he can to stay on Mayor Ted Egan's good side. Unimpressed when Rosewood calls the FBI to help solve the case, Lutz holds Bogomil responsible as commanding officer and suspends him, despite Bogomil's efforts to convince him that Rosewood was only following a hunch. Lutz also punishes Taggart and Rosewood by placing them on traffic duty. On the way home, Bogomil is shot and injured by Karla Fry, the chief hench-woman of Maxwell Dent. Finding out about the shooting by a news report, Axel Foley abandons his undercover duties and immediately flies out to Beverly Hills to help find out who shot Bogomil. Taggart and Rosewood agree to assist Foley because of Lutz's attempts to find an excuse to get them fired.

Posing as an undercover FBI agent to get past Lutz with the aid of Detective Jeffrey Friedman, Foley soon starts making the connection between the robberies and Dent. He first finds out that the ammunition fired at one of the robberies was designed by Charles Cain, the manager of a gun club owned by Dent. Foley has Bogomil's daughter Jan use her connections as an insurance agent to find out about Dent's financial dealings. Dent is robbing his own businesses on purpose in order to finance firearms transactions with an arms dealer named Nikos Thomopolis and is discreetly using Cain as the front man for his operations. Bogomil was shot because his investigation was on the correct track into the case.

Having foiled a robbery attempt at a bank depot, Foley is able to trick Dent's accountant Sidney Bernstein into using his computer and discovers that Dent and Karla are planning to leave the country. Foley also learns from Jan that all of Dent's businesses have had their insurance coverage canceled and are about to go bankrupt except his race track, which he is convinced is the next target. On the way to the race track, Foley solves the latest riddle sent to the police, and is convinced that this riddle was made easily solvable in order to implicate Cain as the Alphabet Bandit. However, Foley knows Cain is a patsy designed to throw the authorities off Dent's trail.

The three arrive too late to stop the robbery and find Cain's body among those killed. While Lutz announces publicly that the Alphabet Crimes have been solved, Foley notices some red mud at the stables, which leads him, Taggart and Rosewood to Dent's oil field, where Dent is making his final arms deal with Thomopolis. The three get into a shootout with everyone involved in the deal. Dent confronts Foley in the warehouse, but Foley gets distracted by one of Dent's henchmen on the roof above him and Dent gets away. Dent then crashes through the wall in his car and Foley shoots Dent through the windshield, sending his car down a hill and erupting in flames, after running Foley over. Karla appears and is about to kill Foley, but is shot dead by Taggart.

Just as the last thugs are about to flee, the police arrive upon the scene, along with Lutz and Mayor Egan. Lutz tries to fire Rosewood and Taggart for their insubordination, and also tries to arrest Foley. However, both Taggart and Rosewood stand up to Lutz this time and prove that Dent was the real Alphabet Bandit. They are also able to convince Mayor Egan of Lutz's incompetence, and the Mayor personally fires Lutz because he is tired of his abusive attitude towards his own men.

Mayor Egan chooses Bogomil to replace Lutz as the new Police Chief. Foley returns to Detroit, but not before he gets chewed out by Inspector Todd over the phone, after Egan called Todd to congratulate him on allowing Foley to assist them on this case.

Cast

Production

Paramount Pictures had planned a television series based on the first film. Eddie Murphy turned down the series but was willing to do a sequel.[3] Producers Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer hired Tony Scott to direct due to his success with the 1986 blockbuster film Top Gun. The film was originally to be set and filmed in London and Paris; however, the script was re-written after Eddie Murphy expressed a reluctance to film outside the United States.

Soundtrack

The song "Hold On" as sung by Keta Bill plays during the scene wherein Axel, Rosewood, and Taggart confront Dent at the Playboy Mansion. However, the film's soundtrack CD released by MCA Records includes only a different song entitled "Hold On," sung by Corey Hart. This song has different music and slightly altered lyrics. The film introduced George Michael's controversial song "I Want Your Sex". It also includes "Cross My Broken Heart" by The Jets (a Top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100) and "Shakedown" by Bob Seger (which became a No. 1 hit on that same chart), as well as "Better Way" performed by James Ingram. The Pointer Sisters scored a moderate hit with "Be There," their single from the soundtrack. It was the second time the sisters had contributed to the Beverly Hills Cop franchise; they'd notched a top 10 single with "Neutron Dance" from the Beverly Hills Cop soundtrack. As with the first film, none of Harold Faltermeyer's soundtrack score has ever been released. However, Faltermeyer's 1988 album, Harold F, includes a song called "Bad Guys", which is used as part of the film's score—an instrumental section of the song plays during the opening jewelry store robbery scene, and also during several other scenes throughout the film.

The soundtrack debuted at No. 8 on the Billboard charts and spent 26 weeks on the charts, a far cry compared to the 49 weeks spent by the first film's soundtrack. Despite this, one song from the album, "Shakedown", was nominated for an Academy Award and the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song. However, another song from the album, "I Want Your Sex", won the Razzie Award for Worst Song.

  1. "Shakedown" - Bob Seger
  2. "Be There" - Pointer Sisters
  3. "In Deep" - Charlie Sexton
  4. "Hold On" - Corey Hart
  5. "I Want Your Sex" - George Michael
  6. "Better Way" - James Ingram
  7. "Love/Hate" - Pebbles
  8. "Cross My Broken Heart" - The Jets
  9. "36 Lovers" - Ready for the World
  10. "I Can't Stand It" - Sue Ann
  11. "All Revved Up" - Jermaine Jackson

Reception

Box office

Beverly Hills Cop II was one of the most anticipated films of 1987 and became a box office success upon release, despite not making as much as Beverly Hills Cop.[4][5] The film debuted at No. 1, earning $33 million on its opening weekend, a sales mark that would result in its being that year's highest-opening weekend debut. Beverly Hills Cop II made approximately $153,665,036, becoming the third biggest hit domestically at the box office that year, after Fatal Attraction and Three Men and a Baby, and the second highest-grossing film worldwide that year, behind Fatal Attraction.[6]

Critical reception

The film received a mixed reception. Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 46% of 26 surveyed critics gave it a positive review; the average rating is 4.9/10.[7] Metacritic, which assigns a normalized score, rated it 48/100 based on 11 reviews.[8] Desson Howe of The Washington Post called it "a sequel that's as good as the original, if not better."[9] Roger Ebert rated it 1/4 stars and wrote, "What is comedy? That's a pretty basic question, I know, but Beverly Hills Cop II never thought to ask it."[10] Janet Maslin of The New York Times wrote that the film is a skillful clone of the first film that can't match that one's novelty or excitement.[11] Variety called it "a noisy, numbing, unimaginative, heartless remake of the original film."[12] Sheila Benson of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "It's hard to believe that the group who came up with the hard, clean edges of Top Gun, sleek and unfeeling though it may have been, could make a picture as crude, as muddled, as destructo-Derbyish as this one."[13]

Accolades

Nominations

Awards

References

  1. "Beverly Hills Cop II Production Budget". The Numbers. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  2. "Beverly Hills Cop II". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  3. Haflidason, Almar. "Beverly Hills Cop II DVD (1987)". BBC. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  4. "'Beverly Hills Cop II' Sets an Earnings Record". The New York Times. 1987-05-28. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  5. "'Cop II' Retains Lead In Box Office Sales". The New York Times. 1987-06-03. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  6. "1987 DOMESTIC GROSSES". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  7. "Beverly Hills Cop II (1987)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  8. "Beverly Hills Cop II". Metacritic. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  9. Howe, Desson (1987-05-22). "'Beverly Hills Cop II'". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  10. Ebert, Roger (1987-05-22). "Beverly Hills Cop II". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  11. Maslin, Janet (1987-05-20). "Beverly Hills Cop II (1987)". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  12. 12.0 12.1 "Review: 'Beverly Hills Cop II'". Variety. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  13. Benson, Sheila (1987-05-20). "Movie Review : 'Cop Ii' Turns Up The Volume". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-12-25.
  14. "Films in Close Race for Globe Awards". Wilmington Morning Star. Associated Press. 1988-01-06. p. 6D. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  15. "1987 Archive". Razzies.com. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  16. "All Winners". Nick.com. Retrieved 2014-01-23.

External links

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