Amazon.com Essentials: While its sequels were formulaic and safe, the first Beverly Hills Cop set out to explore some uncharted territory, and succeeded. A blend of violent action picture and sharp comedy, the film has an excellent director, Martin Brest (Scent of a Woman), who finds some original perspectives on stock scenes (highway chases, police rousts) and hits a gleeful note with Murphy while skewering L.A. culture. Good support from Judge Reinhold and John Ashton as local cops not used to doing things the Detroit way (Murphy's character hails from the Motor City). Paul Reiser has a funny, brief moment at the beginning, and Bronson Pinchot makes a hilarious impression in a great, never-to-be-duplicated scene with the star. --Tom Keogh
Amazon.com video review:
48 HRS.
Before the action-oriented "buddy movie" formula settled into place in the
1980s and '90s with the Lethal Weapon films, Walter Hill's 48
HRS. presented a much more irreverent and politically incorrect version
of the genre. Eddie Murphy made an auspicious film debut alongside veteran
Nick Nolte's consummate performance as a worn cop. Murphy plays a convict
on a two-day furlough from prison to help capture his former partner (James
Remar). The intense animosity between his character and Nolte's impatient
detective is rude and violent--albeit in a comic way--and the film's racist
and sexist banter is so ubiquitous that some viewers might be turned off.
(This early, raw Murphy is not the Murphy of The Nutty Professor.)
Then again, sometimes deliberate overkill is funny in itself, which is
certainly closer to Hill's intention. There are a couple of scenes for the
ages in this film, especially Murphy's single-handed shutdown of the action
in a redneck bar. --Tom Keogh
Beverly Hills Cop
While its sequels were formulaic and safe, the first Beverly Hills
Cop set out to explore some uncharted territory, and succeeded. A blend
of violent action picture and sharp comedy, the film has an excellent
director, Martin Brest (Scent of a Woman), who finds some original
perspectives on stock scenes (highway chases, police rousts) and hits a
gleeful note with Murphy while skewering L.A. culture. Good support from
Judge Reinhold and John Ashton as local cops not used to doing things the
Detroit way (Murphy's character hails from the Motor City). Paul Reiser has
a funny, brief moment at the beginning, and Bronson Pinchot makes a
hilarious impression in a great, never-to-be-duplicated scene with the
star. --Tom Keogh
Trading Places
In this crowd-pleasing 1983 comedy of high finance about a homeless con
artist who becomes a Wall Street robber baron, Eddie Murphy consolidated
the success of his startling debut in the previous year's 48 HRS. and
polished his slick-winner persona. The turnabout begins with an argument
between super-rich siblings, played by Ralph Bellamy and Don Ameche: Are
captains of industry, they wonder, born or made? To settle the issue, the
meanies construct a cruel experiment in social Darwinism. Preppie
commodities trader Dan Aykroyd (perfectly cast) is stripped of all his
worldly goods and expelled from the firm, and Murphy's smelly derelict is
appointed to take his place, graduating to tailored suits and a world-class
harem in record time. Eventually the two men team up to teach the nasty old
manipulators a lesson, cornering the market in frozen-orange-juice futures
in the process. Director John Landis (The Blues Brothers) doesn't
have the world's lightest touch, but he hits most of the jokes hard and
quite a few of them pay off. Trading Places is also a landmark film
for fans of Jamie Lee Curtis. --David Chute