
Let’s get something straight: nobody asked for a movie remake of a forgotten 80s cop TV show starring Channing Tatum β a man previously best known for having cheekbones you could slice cheese on β and Jonah Hill. Nobody saw it coming. Nobody thought it would work. And yet here we are, over a decade later, and 21 Jump Street remains one of the funniest films of the 21st century. How is it even real?
The plot, if you can call it that with a straight face: two spectacularly incompetent cops β Schmidt (Hill), a nervous wreck with a heart of gold and the coordination of a labrador puppy, and Jenko (Tatum), a beautiful idiot who coasted through life on his jawline β are sent undercover to a high school to bust a drug ring. What follows is a masterclass in everything going wrong in exactly the right way.
The genius of the film is that it’s completely self-aware without being smug about it. It knows it’s a dumb premise. It says so, loudly, through Ice Cube’s perpetually furious captain who is also somehow a comedic treasure. And then it absolutely commits to that dumb premise and executes it with more craft and timing than most “serious” films manage. The gag where they accidentally swap their cover identities and Jenko β the thick one β ends up in AP Chemistry while Schmidt has to navigate the social hellscape of popularity? Chef’s kiss.
But here’s the thing that catches you off guard: there’s genuine heart in this movie. The friendship between Schmidt and Jenko β the nerd and the jock who somehow find each other across the great divide of high school trauma β is actually sweet. You root for them. You shouldn’t, given that they are catastrophically bad at their jobs and cause an almost criminal amount of property damage, but you do.
Channing Tatum, it turns out, is extraordinarily funny. This was the film that unlocked something. Jonah Hill gives it everything he has. Together they have the kind of chemistry that can’t be manufactured, directed, or written β it either exists or it doesn’t, and here it blazes.
A movie this stupid has no business being this good. And yet.
Score: 9/10 β Dumb, loud, chaotic, and secretly kind of brilliant. Much like high school itself.