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| On 10 years ago

22 Jump Street’s frat-boy formula works

By Peter Feldman

Their characters, Jenko and Schmidt, are immature, inept individuals whose penchant for mishaps feeds the humour. Released two years ago, the first film attempted to reboot a largely forgotten 1987 TV series that helped launch Johnny Depp’s career.

This hearty sequel follows basically the same storyline, but with more laughs and less gross-out humour. It is far more enjoyable than its predecessor and the characters become quite likeable. Instead of infiltrating a high school to arrest the suppliers of a new synthetic drug, Jonah Hill’s Schmidt and Channing Tatum’s Jenko now attend a college to do the same.

Jonah Hill, Ice Cube and Channing Tatum in ’22 Jump Street’. Picture: Supplied.

 

But when Jenko meets a kindred spirit on the football team named Zook (Wyatt Russell), and Schmidt infiltrates the art major scene, where he meets a sexy lady (Amber Stevens), they begin to question their partnership.

Directed by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller (The Lego Movie), 22 Jump Street cleverly uses Tatum’s puppy-dog appeal and Hill’s low-key vulnerability. The directors have also made effective use of Ice Cube as their irate boss. His character degenerates from being a belligerent policeman to launching a near-homicidal vendetta against Schmidt.

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