Current:Home > InvestWill Smith, Martin Lawrence look back on 30 years of 'Bad Boys': 'It's a magical cocktail' -Wealth Empowerment Academy
Will Smith, Martin Lawrence look back on 30 years of 'Bad Boys': 'It's a magical cocktail'
View
Date:2025-04-15 19:41:26
Imagine a pop culture landscape where Dana Carvey and Jon Lovitz, the two "Saturday Night Live" regulars eyed to star in what would become “Bad Boys,” were actually hired instead of Will Smith and Martin Lawrence.
Weird, right? Smith would agree. “It’s just a little less seasoning in the world if there’d been no ‘Bad Boys,’ ” he says.
The original “Bad Boys” in 1995 made bonafide Hollywood movie stars out of sitcom actors Smith (he of “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air”) and Lawrence (the main man of “Martin”). Smith’s loose-cannon bachelor Mike Lowrey and Lawrence’s headstrong family man Marcus Burnett were Miami cops who traded insults, threw themselves into firefights guns ablazing and popped on screen right off the bat, and the fourth film “Bad Boys: Ride or Die” (in theaters Friday) builds on that relationship.
Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox
This sometimes means doling out tough love, like when Marcus smacks Mike across the face – multiple times – to get his pal’s mind right. “I was like, ‘Hey, man, listen, we ain't trying to do this all day,’ ” Smith, 55, quips about filming that scene. “If you’re going to do it, just do it.”
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
“But that's the ride-or-die part of it,” Lawrence, 59, adds in a more serious tone. “What you would do for your partner.”
Given that the new “Bad Boys” is Smith's first major theatrical release since he slapped Chris Rock two years ago at the Oscars, the scene is a somewhat meta moment inside “Ride or Die.” The movie finds Marcus rethinking his life perspective after a near-death experience, Mike worrying that his work puts loved ones in harm's way, and both detectives going on the run from the law after digging up police corruption.
Calling USA TODAY from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where he and Lawrence are promoting "Bad Boys," Smith feels like Mike and Marcus as characters “represent pieces of what I'm experiencing and how I'm evolving as a human,” he says.
“Mike Lowrey kind of represents the part of me that's resisting the future, and Martin's character is really the part of me that's trying to stay open to the groundlessness of what it really means to be in this world. So I'm evolving as Mike and Marcus.”
Longtime “Bad Boys” producer Jerry Bruckheimer says Smith and Lawrence “really understand what the audience wants” and have grown as storytellers and performers over three decades. He was always confident they were the right two guys. “Martin's the funniest man alive and Will becomes his straight man,” Bruckheimer says. “Once or twice in our life, we made a good decision.”
Because Lawrence signed on first for the original movie, “I had to choose a partner and I couldn't get Eddie Murphy,” he jokes, sparking one of Smith’s signature laughs. Lawrence’s sister was a big “Fresh Prince” fan and thought Smith would be good, and he invited Smith out to dinner.
“We had never really met, never really hung out,” Smith recalls. “That was the first time we really sat down and talked. I was already jealous of him: ‘Fresh Prince’ was on NBC, so it was big, but ‘Martin’ was the people's champ! I felt like Joe Frazier with Ali.”
Five minutes into the dinner, “I knew that was my guy and we've been rolling ever since,” Lawrence says. Adds Smith: “When you mix that kind of natural chemistry with a little bit of work ethic and a little bit of love and respect for each other, it's a magical cocktail.”
Making “Ride or Die” put both actors in a nostalgic mood. They’d watch scenes from the previous movies during filming to get back in the "Bad Boys" mindset, and revisiting the ’95 film led to an epiphany for Smith.
“I was hell-bent on ‘I’m gonna be the biggest movie star in the world!’ And my mind was so completely future-focused. So many goals and so much drive,” Smith says. “I remember standing with Martin a few months ago looking at ‘Bad Boys 1,’ and I was like, ‘Oh, no, that kid didn't realize he was in the middle of his dreams.’
“I didn't know I was experiencing everything that I ever dreamed about. I had arrived, I was there, it was a studio movie with Martin Lawrence and (producers) Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer that was going to go on to be an absolute cult classic. What more was I looking for?
“That was I think the major takeaway and awakening that happened for me on this movie. Life is not tomorrow. Life is not after you fix something or after you get married or after you make X amount of money. It's right now."
Lawrence concurs: "It was just about being in the moment and enjoying the blessing.”
veryGood! (136)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Taiwan envoy says he’s hopeful Biden-Xi meeting will reduce tensions in the Asia-Pacific region
- Biden seizes a chance to refocus on Asia as wars rage in Europe and the Mideast
- US sanctions Iran-backed militia members in Iraq conducting strikes against American forces
- JoJo Siwa reflects on Candace Cameron Bure feud: 'If I saw her, I would not say hi'
- 4 surgeries, 9 rounds of chemo: This college athlete is back to basketball and crushing it
- Tyler Perry's immeasurable love for his mom: 'When she died, everything in me died'
- DA says gun charge dropped against NYC lawmaker seen with pistol at protest because gun did not work
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Man accused of kidnapping a 9-year-old girl from New York park is charged with rape
Ranking
- 2024 Olympics: Gymnast Ana Barbosu Taking Social Media Break After Scoring Controversy
- Biden meets with Mexican president and closes out APEC summit in San Francisco
- DeSantis appointees seek Disney communications about governor, laws in fight over district
- George Brown, drummer and co-founder of Kool & The Gang, dead at 74
- Organizers cancel Taylor Swift concerts in Vienna over fears of an attack
- What's ahead for travelers during Thanksgiving 2023
- Tyler Perry's immeasurable love for his mom: 'When she died, everything in me died'
- EU nations reach major breakthrough to stop shipping plastic waste to poor countries
Recommendation
Southern California rocked by series of earthquakes: Is a bigger one brewing?
US sanctions Iran-backed militia members in Iraq conducting strikes against American forces
Chinese court to consider compensation for people on missing Malaysia Airlines flight, relative says
Years after strike, West Virginia public workers push back against another insurance cost increase
The 'Rebel Ridge' trailer is here: Get an exclusive first look at Netflix movie
Powerful earthquake shakes southern Philippines; no tsunami warning
Gospel singer Bobbi Storm nearly kicked off Delta flight for refusing to stop singing
Activation breathwork aims to unlock psychedelic state naturally: I felt like I was in a different world