Beverly Hills Cop 2
During watching TV, Alex Foley, a strong and intelligent cop, shocked by knowing that his friends have been fired by a mysterious woman, the thing that makes him returns in hurry to Beverly Hills, in order to visit his friend in the hospital, where he joins them, in order to investigate on the case and find out that woman.
27 November 1938, Brooklyn, New York, USA
30 March 1957, New York City, New York, USA
1 January 1966, Newport Beach, California, USA
6 September 1961, Midland, Ontario, Canada
3 December 1952, Pennsville, New Jersey, USA
12 February 1963, Ohio, USA
21 February 1964, Redondo Beach, California, USA
15 February 1955, Toronto, Canada
17 December 1961, St. Mary, Jamaica
7 February 1965, Andrews, South Carolina, USA
21 May 1957, Wilmington, Delaware, USA
25 August 1963, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
9 March 1949, Fall River, Massachusetts, USA
15 July 1963, Rødovre, Denmark
24 November 1953, Highland Heights, Kentucky, USA
6 November 1931, Birmingham, Alabama, USA
6 October 1946, Hanover, Pennsylvania, USA
3 January 1938, Denver, Colorado, USA
28 January 1961, Santa Monica, California, USA
November 29, 2002
Skip this one and go back to the first 'Cop.'
January 01, 2000
What is comedy? That's a pretty basic question, I know, but Cop II never thought to ask it.
February 07, 2006
Not as good as the original, but fast and funny enough to suffice fans
August 04, 2002
This ultraslick, laughless sequel suffers from Axel Foley's personality overhaul into a complete jerk.
October 22, 2003
Fun sequel
June 12, 2013
The film seems... to be a precisely timed affair: so many seconds for this, so many for that, and the natural flow of the story be damned.
November 08, 2016
Wonderfully fast and action-packed.
June 24, 2003
Perhaps the pinnacle of Eddie Murphy's career.
July 26, 2002
Pointless, hateful sequel.
April 18, 2008
Been there and done that better.
August 02, 2002
Not quite as frenetically fun as the original, but Murphy still works his game.
June 29, 2013
[Nothing] really, except a delivery system for Murphy. But Murphy in those days was appealing enough that this proves to be very nearly sufficient.

