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Bad Boys: Ride or Die (Lorne Balfe) (2024)
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Average: 2.39 Stars
***** 10 5 Stars
**** 25 4 Stars
*** 41 3 Stars
** 58 2 Stars
* 49 1 Stars
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Composed and Produced by:

Conducted by:
Peter Rotter

Co-Orchestrated and Additional Music by:
Jeremy Earnest

Co-Orchestrated by:
Yaron Eichenstein

Additional Music by:
Max Aruj
Brandon Campbell
Ethan Gillespie
Revin Riepl
Stuart Michael Thomas
Karl Zine
Total Time: 47:40
• 1. Bad Boys: Ride or Die (2:29)
• 2. Sugar Rush Shootout (1:36)
• 3. Basement of the Ocean (2:36)
• 4. Fear is a Tool (2:46)
• 5. Bridge Barrage (2:46)
• 6. Prison Yard Attack (3:12)
• 7. Hacking Howard (3:36)
• 8. Framing the Boys (2:53)
• 9. Flammable Fluid (3:38)
• 10. Finding McGrath (2:24)
• 11. Reggie in Action (3:38)
• 12. Columbian Manicure (5:01)
• 13. Taking Heavies (3:29)
• 14. No More Prayers (2:03)
• 15. Standoff (5:33)

Album Cover Art
Sony Classical
(June 7th, 2024)
Commercial digital release only.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,078
Written 6/15/24
Buy it... only if you desire a more industrial and abrasive version of Lorne Balfe's music for the previous film in the franchise.

Avoid it... if you lament the loss of the attractively raw, reggae-laced style Mark Mancina brought to the concept originally, that personally subjugated even further this time.

Balfe
Balfe
Bad Boys: Ride or Die: (Lorne Balfe) Despite the shockingly poor behavior of franchise star Will Smith at the 2022 Academy Awards, Jerry Bruckheimer was undaunted in pressing forward with a fourth film in the Bad Boys franchise. The preceding film, Bad Boys for Life, mopped up at the theatres just prior to the pandemic of 2020, and these later entries tease the notion that its two 1990's era stars are too old for their usual crime-busting antics but nevertheless thrust them into more such adventures. The corruption to be uncovered in 2024's Bad Boys: Ride or Die lies within the two detectives' own Miami department, and the script is essentially yet another long chase to uncover cartel connections, weed out the bad guys within, and, of course, shoot a whole hell of a lot of henchmen and other undesirable, well-armed nasties. The tone of this movie also includes a hacking component related to the investigation into the corruption, but the core heart of the concept's appeal remains rooted in flying bullets and exploding whatevers. Despite familiar plot elements, these 2020's movies have lost the raw appeal of the 1990's origins for the franchise, and nowhere is that change more prevalent than in the underscores for the films. When Lorne Balfe took over the franchise's music for Bad Boys for Life, there were still some vestiges of the original music's character kept alive, and it helped that Nick Glennie-Smith remained involved. But the tone of what he and Mark Mancina produced for Bad Boys has been abandoned to an even greater degree with Balfe's return for Bad Boys: Ride or Die. The crew for this second Balfe score is mostly different, seven ghostwriters mostly turning over from the four that had contributed to Bad Boys for Life. This resulting shift not only forces the music even further from its snazzier reggae roots but also causes issues of coherency in Bad Boys: Ride or Die. More than its predecessor, you get the impression that the various parts of this score never quite become comfortable with each other, the entirely never gelling despite a moderately successful narrative in some parts. Generally, whereas Balfe had taken Mancina's original franchise sound melodramatic in Bad Boys for Life, he strives for a more industrial and electro-technic personality in Bad Boys: Ride or Die, likely for the digital elements of the story.

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