Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F
The thing you need to know going in: Axel F is nostalgia delivery mechanism first and movie second. It knows this. It's comfortable with this. Whether that's satisfying or frustrating depends entirely on what you're bringing to it.
Full analysis belowNot a woke trap. The film's progressive elements are surface-level and present from early in the runtime: a Black female judge, modern Beverly Hills sensibilities in minor characters. None of this is hidden behind a traditional facade. The film's core value set (father-daughter love, old-school cop competence, loyalty, justice) is visible and dominant throughout. The margin is solidly positive. No trap conditions are met.
⚠️ SPOILER ALERT: This review discusses plot details including the film's villain reveal and resolution.
The thing you need to know going in: Axel F is nostalgia delivery mechanism first and movie second. It knows this. It's comfortable with this. Whether that's satisfying or frustrating depends entirely on what you're bringing to it.
Thirty years after Beverly Hills Cop III, Axel Foley is still working Detroit homicide, still a chaos agent, still the smartest man in any room he enters. His daughter Jane (Taylour Paige) is now a defense attorney in Beverly Hills, representing clients that Axel, with his old-school cop instincts, assumes are guilty. When Jane's life is threatened after she gets too close to a conspiracy inside the BHPD, Axel heads west to help whether she wants him to or not.
The film's emotional center is the fractured father-daughter relationship. Jane resents Axel for a childhood where the job always came first. Axel can't quite understand why his daughter doesn't see that everything he did, including the job, was for her. This is a recognizable and genuinely traditional family conflict: the man whose love language is provision and protection, running up against a daughter who needed presence. The film earns its reconciliation because it gives both of them valid points.
Taylour Paige as Jane is the film's most controversial casting decision for some conservative viewers. She's Black, Jane was never depicted before, and she's written as a capable professional who doesn't need rescuing in any conventional sense. But the film's emotional logic treats her as a daughter in need of her father, not as a symbol of female competence. The relationship dynamics are traditional even if the surface read as progressive.
Kevin Bacon plays Captain Grant, the corrupt BHPD captain who turns out to be the main villain. Bacon is the right level of threatening for this kind of movie. The conspiracy connecting him to the criminal element isn't particularly complex, but it doesn't need to be. The function is to give Axel and his old friends something to dismantle.
Judge Reinhold and John Ashton returning as Rosewood and Taggart is the film's most reliable source of warmth. Rosewood is clearly older but still immediately Billy Rosewood. Taggart is slower but still immediately Taggart. These are not cameos. They're active participants. That choice alone separates Axel F from legacy sequels that use original characters as decoration.
The comedy is the film's weak point. Murphy's Axel is still funny in burst moments, but the script doesn't give him enough situations that play to his specific improvisational gifts. A lot of the comedy reaches for nostalgia-by-association rather than actually being funny. The jokes that land tend to involve character dynamics rather than actual punch lines.
Bruckheimer's steady hand is visible throughout. The action sequences are competent and staged for maximum crowd-pleasing rather than intensity. The film never forgets it's entertainment. It's not trying to say anything profound about police work or justice or family. It's trying to deliver Axel Foley being Axel Foley, three decades later, still better than everyone at solving problems in his specific chaotic way.
For conservative audiences, the verdict is simple: this is a safe watch. The villain is corrupt authority, not capitalism or the military or white America. The hero is a classic masculine archetype who loves his daughter and respects his friends. The franchise's values are intact. A few modern casting adjustments (a Black female judge, diverse extras) are window dressing rather than ideology. Bruckheimer delivered a crowd-pleaser. It's not the original, but it's the best Axel F anyone could have reasonably expected in 2024.
Formula: Weighted Score = Severity × Authenticity Multiplier × Centrality Multiplier
🔴 Woke Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Capable Daughter Who Doesn't Need Rescuing (Modern Competence Trope) | 3 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| Modern Diversity Casting (Supporting and Background) | 1 | 1 | 0.5 | 0.5 |
| Nostalgic Legacy Shielding Thin Content | 1 | 1 | 0.5 | 0.5 |
| TOTAL WOKE | 4.0 | |||
🟢 Traditional Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Father-Daughter Reconciliation | 4 | 0.7 | 1.8 | 5.04 |
| Old-School Competence Beats Bureaucracy | 4 | 0.7 | 1.8 | 5.04 |
| Male Friendship and Loyalty | 3 | 0.7 | 1 | 2.1 |
| Corrupt Authority as Villain | 3 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| TOTAL TRADITIONAL | 15.2 | |||
Score Margin: +11 TRAD
Director: Mark Molloy
NEUTRALMolloy is an Australian commercial and music video director making his feature film debut with Axel F. His background is advertising, which shows: the film is polished, crowd-pleasing, and never challenges its audience. He has no established political track record and his direction here is functional rather than visionary. He keeps the nostalgia machine running, handles Eddie Murphy with clear respect for the star's instincts, and delivers a film that knows exactly what it is.
Writer: Will Beall, Tom Gormican, Kevin Etten
Will Beall has extensive franchise experience (Aquaman, Gangster Squad). Gormican and Etten co-created the TV series That's My Boy energy. The script's central architecture is father-daughter reconciliation, which is a traditional emotional structure even when it includes a competent female lead. The writers made a defensible choice not to write anti-woke commentary into the film, which keeps the movie clean ideologically but also makes it feel slightly toothless as a comedy.
Producers
- Jerry Bruckheimer (Jerry Bruckheimer Films) — Bruckheimer is the most commercially successful producer in Hollywood history and the man behind the original Beverly Hills Cop films. His credits include Top Gun, Pirates of the Caribbean, Con Air, The Rock, and Black Hawk Down. He is consistently aligned with populist, crowd-pleasing, masculinity-friendly entertainment. His return to the franchise is the single strongest indicator of the film's traditional action DNA.
- Netflix (Netflix) — Netflix acquired the film after Paramount couldn't nail down a theatrical plan. This is a streaming prestige acquisition, not an ideologically motivated one. Netflix's record on blockbuster-style action films is mixed, but Axel F performed extremely well in streaming metrics.
Full Cast
Adult Viewer Insight
Conservative viewers will find Axel F largely comfortable territory. The franchise's DNA is intact: a hyper-competent cop who operates outside bureaucratic constraints, loyalty between old friends, a clear villain who is punished, and a family reconciliation as emotional payoff. The casting of Taylour Paige as Jane Foley is the most potentially polarizing choice, but the film treats Jane as a daughter rather than as a progressive symbol. Her competence serves the plot without challenging Axel's centrality or competence. The father-daughter reconciliation is the film's emotional thesis and it's played straight. The film's biggest ideological lean is what it doesn't have: any commentary on race, policing, or contemporary politics. Some critics found this cowardly. From a VirtueVigil perspective, it's the smartest decision the filmmakers made. Axel Foley doesn't need to be made politically relevant in 2024. He needs to be Axel Foley. The film understands this. Stream it. You'll get what you came for.
Parental Guidance
Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F is rated R. Violence: Moderate. Action sequences and gunfights consistent with the franchise tradition. Not gratuitous. Language: Strong. Murphy's comedy has always been profanity-driven. The R rating is primarily language. Sexual Content: Minimal. A suggestive joke or two, consistent with the franchise. Substance Use: Mild. Alcohol in social contexts. Age Recommendation: The R rating is appropriate. This is an adult franchise that parents may have grown up with, which creates multigenerational viewing opportunities if parents want to share the original films first. Discussion Points: How does the franchise's treatment of police competence compare to contemporary portrayals? What does the father-daughter dynamic say about different ways of expressing love? Is nostalgia a legitimate reason to make a sequel, or does a film need to justify its own existence?
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