The humor lands because it’s character-driven, not just stunt-driven. A scene where Bob makes Calvin slow-dance with him to "Time of My Life" in an empty CIA building to build trust is funnier than any car chase. The movie isn’t afraid to get weird—Johnson’s deadpan delivery of absurd lines ("Would you rather fight a horse-sized duck or a hundred duck-sized horses?") is gold.
Bob Stone (Johnson) was a bullied, overweight high school outcast nicknamed "Bob the Dweeb." Calvin Joyner (Hart) was the popular, charismatic "Big Man on Campus" who once saved Bob from a humiliating locker room prank. Fast forward 20 years: Calvin is now a bored, unfulfilled accountant stuck in a rut. Bob, on the other hand, has transformed into a muscle-bound, lethal CIA agent who’s gone rogue—or has he? movie central intelligence
Here’s a review of the 2016 action-comedy Central Intelligence . On paper, Central Intelligence sounds like a lazy Sunday afternoon punchline: Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson and Kevin Hart as high school reunion buddies turned unlikely spy duo. But what could have been a forgettable paycheck movie instead delivers consistent laughs and genuine heart, thanks to the unexpected alchemy of its two leads. The humor lands because it’s character-driven, not just
Bob drags Calvin into a world of international espionage, rogue agents, and a missing satellite code, forcing the reluctant numbers-cruncher to become an impromptu secret agent. Bob Stone (Johnson) was a bullied, overweight high