After making their way through high school (twice), big changes are in store for officers Schmidt (Jonah Hill) and Jenko (Channing Tatum) when they go deep undercover at a local college. But when Jenko meets a kindred sp...
After making their way through high school (twice), big changes are in store for officers Schmidt (Jonah Hill) and Jenko (Channing Tatum) when they go deep undercover at a local college. But when Jenko meets a kindred sp...
The film is a self-aware meta-comedy that primarily satirizes action movie tropes, sequel expectations, and general aspects of college life and friendship, without promoting a discernible political ideology from either the left or the right.
The movie includes visible diversity within its supporting cast, though its central roles are not explicit race or gender swaps of traditionally white characters. The narrative maintains a neutral or positive framing of traditional identities, without explicit critique or central DEI themes.
The film utilizes the homoerotic subtext of the protagonists' intense friendship as a consistent comedic element. While this generates humor from their discomfort with being perceived as a couple, it neither affirms nor explicitly denigrates LGBTQ+ identity, functioning as an incidental comedic trope rather than a central theme.
The film features female characters in supporting roles, but none are depicted engaging in or winning close-quarters physical combat against male opponents. Combat scenes involving female characters primarily rely on firearms or vehicle-based action, not direct physical confrontation.
The film '22 Jump Street' is a sequel to a reboot of the original TV series. Its main characters, Schmidt and Jenko, were created specifically for the film series and are not gender-swapped versions of characters from the original show. No established legacy characters from prior canon are portrayed with a different gender.
The film is a sequel to an adaptation of a TV series. Key characters either originated in the film series or maintain their established race from the prior installment or source material. No character canonically or historically established as one race is portrayed as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources