Skip to main content

Bad Boys 3 might actually happen, with The A-Team director at the helm

It’s been more than a decade since Will Smith and Martin Lawrence last suited up as Miami narcotics officers Mike Lowrey and Marcus Burnett in Bad Boys 2, but a sequel to that surprise hit could indeed be moving forward, according to a recent update on the project.

Joe Carnahan, who directed The A-Team and The Grey (among other recent action films), is reportedly in talks to direct Bad Boys 3 based on a script from Safe House writer David Guggenheim. Deadline indicates that the project is being fast-tracked by Sony Pictures with the hope of making it Will Smith’s next film after the DC Comics supervillain movie Suicide Squad.

Recommended Videos

The original 1995 franchise-starter Bad Boys played a key role in launching the movie careers of both Lawrence and Smith, as well as director Michael Bay, who returned to helm the 2003 sequel. Celebrated for the explosive visual effects that would become a hallmark of Bay’s work, both R-rated films were a pleasant surprise for the studio, collectively earning more than $414 million worldwide. Bad Boys 2 currently ranks as the 11th highest-grossing film of all time among buddy-comedy action movies released in the U.S.

There’s no word on whether Smith and Lawrence are entertaining the idea of a return to the Bad Boys franchise, although the report suggests that the studio is pushing to bring both actors back to the roles they first played 20 years ago.

For his part, Carnahan has done a nice job of establishing himself as exactly the sort of filmmaker that would be right at home with a film like Bad Boys 3. Equally comfortable with the grim, gritty tone of 2011’s The Grey — popularly regarded as the movie in which Liam Neeson fights a pack of wolves — and the more bombastic action of the 2010 television series adaptation The A-Team, Carnahan would likely draw from both wells in order to bring the Bad Boys franchise back to theaters.

Rick Marshall
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
Eddington trailer: Ari Aster crafts a social media nightmare
Pedro Pascal points at Joaquin Phoenix.

Ari Aster takes audiences back to 2020 in the official trailer for Eddington.

“Of course, they keep looking at that lab in China. If you look at that lab in Wuhan,” the voiceover states at the beginning of the trailer. “When that was established, it was 1956, of course. That was the year Tom Hanks was born, the first celebrity with the virus.”

Read more
Don’t let these 3 hidden April 2025 streaming TV shows fly under your radar
Kevin Bacon standing with a bulletproof vest in the series The Bondsman.

Yes, this month is already full of fantastic TV shows returning with new seasons like The Handmaid’s Tale, The Last of Us, and Black Mirror. But with 30 nights of TV watching in the month and some shows only releasing one episode per week, you’ll have plenty of extra time to check out some other shows, too.

If you’re wondering what to fill your time with while you wait for the next adventures of Joel and Ellie or need to digest the disturbing new episodes in Black Mirror season seven, we have you covered. Dive into these three hidden April 2025 streaming TV shows you don’t want to let fly under your radar.

Read more
The best mysteries on Netflix right now
Jennifer Love Hewitt and Freddie Prince Jr. in I Know What You Did Last Summer.

Fresh mysteries are apparently in short supply on Netflix. We'd start a hunt for the killer, but it was probably the Netflix algorithm. There are so few choices that we had to add I Know What You Did Last Summer. It's not a bad film at all, it's just not a traditional mystery.

Similarly, To Catch a Killer plays better as a thriller than a mystery, but it does have elements of both. In the absence of better choices, these are the two we have to go with. You can find those films and the rest of the best mysteries on Netflix below.

Read more