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Directors Phil Lord and Christopher Miller have followed up their sly franchise reboot with an inevitable sequel that is, at least in part, a sly, self-referencing commentary on the inevitability ...
22 Jump Street, directors Chris ... Jenko and Schmidt must reassume their previous fake identities—un-lookalike brothers Doug and Joey McQuaid—to pose as students, infiltrate the university, ...
A 90-minute gay joke interrupted by 15 minutes of jokes about Jonah Hill’s appearance and inability to leap tall buildings, “22 Jump Street” has to go down as another summer of 2014 ...
But “22 Jump Street” hits far more often than it misses, and even when it misses by a mile, the effort is so delightfully zany that it’s hard not to give Lord and Miller an “A” for effort.
When a movie opens with a fight sequence featuring Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum set to DJ Snake and Lil Jon’s “Turn Down for What,’’ it could be a) setting itself up for disaster or b) a ...
21 Jump Street was one of the nicest surprises that Hollywood gave us in 2012. It was a silly, goofy undercover cop caper that rested comfortably on the easy-going chemistry of unlikely double act ...
In "22 Jump Street," a seemingly exhausted Hardy tells the two lovable bozos that all they need to do is the exact same thing they did last time: go undercover and find the supplier.
22 Jump Street is damn funny, sometimes outrageously so. It laughs at its own dumb logic and invites us in on the fun.
If you’re using this article as a “see it vs. don’t see it” guide, you’re urged now to not see this movie in theaters. Should you not heed this advice, “22 Jump Street” will spend the better part of ...
Watch a clip from the film "22 Jump Street." Starring Channing Tatum, Jonah Hill, Nick Offerman, Amber Stevens and Ice Cube. (Photo/Video: Sony) Sequelitis, which can be a wasting disease if not a ...