Bad Boys: Ride or Die 4K Blu-ray Movie

Home

Bad Boys: Ride or Die 4K Blu-ray Movie United States

4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital Copy
Sony Pictures | 2024 | 115 min | Rated R | Sep 24, 2024

Bad Boys: Ride or Die 4K (Blu-ray Movie)

Price

List price: $49.99
Amazon: $29.96 (Save 40%)
Third party: $24.98 (Save 50%)
In Stock
Buy Bad Boys: Ride or Die 4K on Blu-ray Movie

Movie rating

6.7
 / 10

Blu-ray rating

Users4.5 of 54.5
Reviewer4.0 of 54.0
Overall4.0 of 54.0

Overview

Bad Boys: Ride or Die 4K (2024)

After their late former Captain is framed, Lowrey and Burnett try to clear his name, only to end up on the run themselves.

Starring: Will Smith, Martin Lawrence, Ioan Gruffudd, Eric Dane, Vanessa Hudgens
Director: Adil El Arbi, Bilall Fallah

Action100%
ComedyInsignificant
CrimeInsignificant

Specifications

  • Video

    Video codec: HEVC / H.265
    Video resolution: 4K (2160p)
    Aspect ratio: 2.39:1
    Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1

  • Audio

    English: Dolby Atmos
    English: Dolby TrueHD 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)

  • Subtitles

    English SDH, Spanish

  • Discs

    Blu-ray Disc
    Single disc (1 BD)
    Digital copy
    4K Ultra HD

  • Playback

    Region A (locked)

Review

Rating summary

Movie3.5 of 53.5
Video5.0 of 55.0
Audio5.0 of 55.0
Extras2.0 of 52.0
Overall4.0 of 54.0

Bad Boys: Ride or Die 4K Blu-ray Movie Review

"It's like redneck Jurassic Park in here!"

Reviewed by Kenneth Brown September 28, 2024

Can you hear it? Bad boys, bad boys... whatcha gonna do? I hear it. Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? You know it. You even kinda love it. Don't lie. Admit it. And either one of two things swim to mind when you hear it play: Cops, the thirty-five-year-strong reality show with more door kick-ins and would-be criminal take-downs than any series has any business kicking or taking, or Bad Boys, the now four-film Will Smith/Martin Lawrence franchise that finds any and every excuse to bust out the iconic Inner Circle reggae classic. So how fares the fourth Bad Boys flick? Ride or Die is actually a good bit of fun. Not great cinema. Not the next evolution of the action genre. Not even the best of the franchise. But a good time all the same. Fans of the, um, saga will find plenty to love here, and not just a rehash of all the bits and punchlines you've enjoyed before. At this point there's a surprising amount of juice to the Mike/Marcus bromance -- at a level perhaps not seen since the Lethal Weapon movies -- and it keeps the laughs and fist pumps coming, even when it falls prey to the same generic action-endgame it's been trotting out since 1995.


When their late captain (Joe Pantoliano, who cameos in a dream sequence) is posthumously accused of corruption and being in league with drug cartels, bad boys Mike Lowry (Will Smith) and Marcus Burnett (Martin Lawrence) race to save his reputation with the help of fresh Miami PD captain Rita Secada (Paola Núñez), her new boyfriend and rising political It-boy Adam Lockwood (Ioan Gruffudd), and Mike's incarcerated son and former cartel assassin Armando Aretas (Jacob Scipio). Surprise, surprise, the dynamic duo learn their former cap wasn't corrupt, but he was homing in on who was, exposing himself to danger and sealing his fate. Can Mike and Marcus snag the baddies before they fall prey to a set up? Or will Joey Pants' be joined by two cops in the hereafter? Directed by Adil & Bilall (the same team that helmed Bad Boys for Life) and written by Chris Bremner and Will Beall, the fourth Bad Boys also stars Vanessa Hudgens, Alexander Ludwig, Eric Dane, Melanie Liburd, John Salley, Tasha Smith and Tiffany Haddish.

A healthy dose of suspension of disbelief is required to go along with Ride or Die's partners on the run schtick, but taken on its own terms, Bad Boys continues to work because Smith and Lawrence's on-screen chemistry is so funny and infectious. One-liners and put-downs come a mile a minute, and there's the always amusing running gag of Mike and Marcus arguing themselves into distracting any and every bad guy that needs put on the ground. In between is all the Skittles, delusions of grandeur and shoot outs you could hope for, even if a subplot involving Mike's ex-Cartel son is often a leap too far. The supporting cast is a blast as well, despite making the movie sometimes play like a string of sketches on a comedy show, but the episodic beats line up with what's come before I suppose. Likewise, all the cliches you actually want from a '90s-era action franchise -- that's aging as gracefully as you could expect -- are out in force. Lunging from cars firing, leaping sideways while shooting, scrambling from cover to cover while, yep you guessed it, blasting anything holding a laser-scoped assault weapon.

So why is it that these films always deal such obvious hands when it comes to villains? The word generic would be overly kind when describing the level of villainy on display here, and very few, if any, actual twists and turns accompany the brains and brawn out to bring Mike and Marcus down. I'm not asking for a baddie-focused flick, but a little bit of flair and ingenuity is all it would take to create an antagonist that does more than seek revenge, want copious amounts of cash, or slithers out of the shadows to reveal, gasp, I'm a part of the conspiracy too. It's all terribly predictable, and if not for Smith and Lawrence hamming and barking it up with such pizazz, it would amount to one giant bore. Is it too much to ask for a screenplay that offers something smarter, sharper and more sensational than throwback style over meaningful substance. Ah well, there's at least new love, new commitments, some actual growth, and ongoing family drama in Mike and Marcus's personal lives to keep the twosome worthy of our time and affection.


Bad Boys: Ride or Die 4K Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality  5.0 of 5

No shocker here. Bad Boys: Ride or Die looks fantastic thanks to Sony's striking 2160p 4K UltraHD video presentation. There isn't a pixel out of place, nor anything resembling an issue, much less anything that rises to the level of blocking, banding or other such nonsense. You may notice the tiniest bit of crush in the vivid pink and green lights that splash across a club Mike and Marcus visit, but it's almost certainly optical, not a product of any encoding shortcoming. Colors are rich, vibrant and perfectly saturated, with exceedingly convincing skintones (relative to the sweltering sunstruck lighting that has become one of the franchise's calling cards), beautifully inky black levels, and exacting contrast leveling. Shadow delineation is excellent, showcasing or absorbing whatever elements Robrecht Heyvaert's photography requires, and grain is all but non-existent, save a faint touch of filmic nuance. The color boost delivered in 4K is not only adequate, it's borderline extraordinary, infusing almost every ounce of Miami nightlife and daytime shootouts with flash and sizzle, all of which stands head and shoulders above its standard Blu-ray counterpart. Similarly, detail is more precise noticeably more satisfying as well, with razor-sharp edge definition, revealing fine textures (resolved especially wonderfully in extreme close-ups of Smith and Lawrence's faces), and every last little bit of visual information to be had is represented without flaw. (The 1080p transfer is a beaut, but good God, does the 4K presentation go full force.) All told, Bad Boys: Ride or Die serves up the goods. All the goods. The best of the goods. And gives Sony another feather in its UltraHD cap.


Bad Boys: Ride or Die 4K Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality  5.0 of 5

Well shit, I'm all out of hyperbole. What to do, then, with Sony's Atmos experience? I guess I'll have to dig up more glowing praise. As action mixes go, you'll be hard pressed to find a more enthralling, engaging and involving track that Ride or Die's hyperkinetic Atmos experience. So much so that, I kid you not, it comes about as close as a home theater mix could to replicating a 4DX theatrical viewing. Dialogue remains intelligible and clear throughout, which is something considering how much noise and chaos erupts across Mike and Marcus's misadventures in crime fighting. Prioritization is terrific, even when gunfire, explosions, screeching cars and roaring engines assault the listener, seemingly from every direction. The surround channels offer directional wizardry on a gut-punch level, flinging shrapnel, torn metal and shattered steel across the soundscape with slick pans and buttery smooth spatial subtlety. LFE output matches the soundfield dimensionality beat for beat too, lending weight and presence to every punch, blast and boom the film drums up, and does so with enough power to make you feel it in your sternum. Oh, and there's the music score as well, which has too much fun kicking the action up notch after notch until the whole mix threatens to come crashing down. Does it ever fall or falter, though? Nope. This is what action movies were destined to sound like, and Sony ensures Ride or Die does modern action Atmos'ing right.


Bad Boys: Ride or Die 4K Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras  2.0 of 5

  • Will & Martin: Chemistry, Legacy & Laughs (HD, 4 minutes) - A quick look at the stars.
  • Fights, Camera, Action (HD, 4 minutes) - Another quickie, this time focused on the action.
  • Outtakes & Bloopers (HD, 3 minutes) - Smith, Lawrence and company yuk it up.
  • The Bruckheimer Legacy: Crafting Bad Boys and Beyond (HD, 4 minutes) - An overview of the house of adventures and misadventures Bruckheimer's production company has brought to the screen.
  • Partners in Crime (HD, 5 minutes) - Mike and Marcus, heroes for the ages.
  • Deleted Scenes (HD, 7 minutes) - Five scenes are included: "Wedding Gossip," "Welcome to the Family," "Life Lessons," "Joy Ride" and "Gathering Evidence."
  • Previews (HD)


Bad Boys: Ride or Die 4K Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation  4.0 of 5

What's left to say? Come for the laughs, stay for the extraordinary AV presentation and... maybe duck out before the subpar special features disappoint. Bad Boys: Ride or Die could've been another ho-hum action franchise sequel, but instead ups the fun, ups the insanity, and ups the action to the delight of fans. And Sony? Sony delivers the goods yet again, giving us a genre pic that knows how to make every gunfight look and sound like a million bucks.


Other editions

Bad Boys: Ride or Die: Other Editions