Central Intelligence
Central Intelligence is a 2016 American action comedy film directed by Rawson Marshall and written by Thurber, Ike Barinholtz and David Stassen.The film stars Kevin Hart and Dwayne Johnson as two old high school friends who team up to save America afterone of them joins the CIA in order to save the world from a terrorist who has an intention to sell satellite codes.The film premiered in Los Angeles on June 10, 2016 and was theatrically released in the United States on June 17, 2016. Central Intelligence received mixed to positive reviews and grossed $220 million worldwide against its $50 million budget.
Bullied as a teen for being overweight, Bob Stone (Dwayne Johnson) shows up to his high school reunion looking fit and muscular. While there, he finds Calvin Joyner (Kevin Hart), a fast-talking accountant who misses his glory days as a popular athlete. Stone is now a lethal CIA agent who needs Calvin's number skills to help him save the compromised U.S. spy satellite system. Together, the former classmates encounter shootouts, espionage and double-crosses while trying to prevent worldwide chaos.
The FBI and other people appeared of that, The Codes were stolen for demolishing the Central Intelligence Agency, Bob tries to make the final call and the final gun shout out and destroys the Bad Agents.
Before they escaped from the FBI, Bob and Jeb has found a place to escape from the FBI and before, The FBI found them and Gun firing all over the place, Bob tries to shot of the FBI hideouts and getting ready for the republicment.
Central Intelligence” is dumb in all the right ways, and also a bit smarter than you might expect. It jams together two frequently incompatible Hollywood modes — the comedy and the action movie — and somehow doesn’t wind up feeling
like an oil-and-water exercise: It’s more like oil and paint thinner. It’s a ’90s nostalgia trip, a rambunctious spy thriller and a knucklehead bromance rolled into one, and as disjointed as that sounds, the movie locates in all three
stories a single, unifying thread of male insecurity. But rather than drowning in macho self-pity — or its natural byproduct, crudely misogynist caricature — it throws off a weirdly disarming sweetness.
'Central Intelligence' is a surprisingly smart bromance between Hart and Johnson that explores male insecurity.