The Naked Gun: New Squad on Fire!

I’ll be honest: when I first heard about the Naked Gun reboot, I wanted to hide under a blanket. Spoof comedy hasn’t just been struggling lately—it’s been dead and buried under a pile of terrible “parody” movies that think yelling about TikTok trends counts as humor. The original Naked Gun movies felt sacred, you know? Like something from a time when people actually cared about making comedy instead of just throwing jokes at a wall to see what sticks. Rebooting it seemed like trying to recreate your favorite childhood meal with completely different ingredients.



But damn if they didn’t actually pull it off.

This new version doesn’t just pay respect to the originals—it gets what made them work in the first place. The magic was never just the silly physical comedy. It was how seriously everyone took the completely ridiculous situations. The camera never laughed at its own jokes. It filmed a guy getting launched out of a cannon like it was filming Casablanca. Director Akiva Schaffer totally gets this. His camera stays completely straight-faced while absolute chaos unfolds, and that’s exactly why it’s so funny.

Liam Neeson: The Guy You Never Saw Coming

Casting Neeson was either brilliant or insane, and honestly, that’s probably why it works. Leslie Nielsen wasn’t always a comedy guy either—he spent years doing serious dramatic roles before he found his calling making people laugh. Neeson feels like he’s on that same journey. He’s not trying to be funny. He’s just delivering completely bonkers dialogue with the same intensity he brought to Schindler’s List. When he explains with complete conviction why someone’s shoelaces are evidence of international terrorism, you believe him. And that’s hilarious.

Plus, he brings something the originals sometimes missed: you actually care about the guy. Even while you’re laughing at him stumbling through crime scenes, there’s something genuinely touching about his earnestness.

Pamela Anderson: The Movie’s Best Surprise

Anderson caught me completely off guard. I expected them to cast her as a wink to the audience—like, “Hey, remember the ’90s?” Instead, she shows up and actually acts. She doesn’t play up her famous persona or try to be in on the joke. She matches Neeson’s energy perfectly, keeping a straight face while everything falls apart around her.



Their chemistry is weird in the best possible way. It’s awkward and unexpected, but it feels real. And somehow that makes the whole movie feel more grounded, like there’s actual heart underneath all the ridiculous gags.

Nostalgia Done Right
This could’ve been one of those lazy “Hey, remember this thing?” movies. Instead, it actually updates the formula. They’re making fun of modern cop shows, Netflix true-crime documentaries, streaming service clichés. There’s this perfect scene where Neeson starts narrating the case like he’s in a Netflix docuseries, complete with dramatic reenactments that just make him look more clueless.

It honors what came before without just copying it. It remembers the rules but isn’t afraid to break them when it makes a scene funnier.

Why This Actually Matters
Everyone’s been saying spoof comedy is dead. Too many bad movies killed it. But this Naked Gun reboot reminds you why the genre worked in the first place. It wasn’t about cramming in pop culture references. It was about craftsmanship. Timing. Treating ridiculous situations with complete seriousness.



And this movie does exactly that. It brings back a style of comedy most people thought was extinct and proves it can still be smart and hilarious.

Bottom Line
I laughed more during this movie than I have in ages. But more than that, I found myself genuinely smiling—the kind that comes from remembering why you love movies in the first place. For people who grew up with the originals, it’s like getting a perfect sequel you never expected. For people who’ve never seen them, it’s the perfect introduction.



Is it perfect? No spoof movie ever is. But it proves that with the right people behind the camera and the right actors willing to fully commit to the bit, you can take something beloved and make it feel fresh again. Who would’ve thought Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson would become comedy gold?
The Naked Gun reboot isn’t just funny—it’s got life in it. Walking out of the theater, I actually felt hopeful about comedy again. Maybe there’s still room for movies that just want to make you laugh.

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