Mark Wahlberg!Winston Duke!Peter Berg!Post Malone? Uh, sure! This power quartet recently teamed up to deliver Netflix originalSpenser Confidential, a cheerfully throwback Boston-set action-comedy. And the movie has caught fire, routinely makingNetflix’s new top 10 lists, proving again that streaming is the perfect platform for mid-budget star-driven genre pictures to throw on and chill the heck out. If you dug the vibes ofSpenser Confidentialand are looking for stuff in a similar vein, look no further. Here’s what you should watch afterSpenser Confidential– all conveniently on Netflix!

Point Blank

Director: Joe Lynch

Writer: Adam G. Simon

Cast: Frank Grillo, Anthony Mackie, Marcia Gay Harden, Teyonah Parris, Boris McGiver, Christian Cooke, Markice Moore

This movie is lean, mean, and full of no-frills thrills. Genre maestroJoe Lynch(Mayhem) has himself quite the perfect action duo inFrank Grilloas a sympathetic criminal trying to pay his debts and expose police corruption, andAnthony Mackieas the nurse who happens to get assigned to Grillo in the aftermath of a shootout. The two form an uneasy alliance and plow their way through the city, surviving shootouts, colorful characters, and a delightfully devilishMarcia Gay Hardenas the big, bad, corrupt cop. While the film plays a little more “meat and potatoes” than the more “willing to be silly”Spenser Confidential, it still has an appealingly dark sense of humor at its core, and Lynch knows how the hell to stage a “one crazy day” flick and all his set pieces. For under 90 minutes,Point Blankpacks quite a Netflix punch.

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Director: Michael Bay

Writers: Michael Barrie, Jim Mulholland, Doug Richardson, George Gallo

Cast: Martin Lawrence, Will Smith, Téa Leoni, Tchéky Karyo, Theresa Randle, Joe Pantoliano

If you caughtBad Boys for Lifein theaters and want some more of that throwback action-comedy charm, well hey,the originalis on Netflix!Will SmithandMartin Lawrenceooze fast-paced charm inMichael Bay’s directorial debut, a Miami-set yarn of long-time friends and detectives trying to bust a drug case without busting each other’s heads first. This film is to Miami asSpenser Confidentialis to Boston – a stylized, ultra-masculine travelogue dedicated to the grimiest yet most appealing facets of this very specific world. Bay’s sunswept, typically kinetic camera work is equal parts jarring and exciting, and every single actor is off the dang leash (particularly MVPJoe Pantoliano). It ain’t a subtle movie, and it’s often a problematic movie, but if you can turn off your brain it’s about some of the best movie candy Netflix can stream.

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Director: Renny Harlin

Writers: Jay Longino, BenDavid Grabinski, Wen-Chia Chang

Cast: Jackie Chan, Johnny Knoxville, Fan Bingbing

In the long and storied pantheon of buddy cop action-comedies, I’m fond of the pairings that surprise upon first glance, and then feel inevitable when you think about them.Jackie ChanandJohnny Knoxville, the center ofRenny Harlin’sSkiptrace, is the perfect example. While it may seem like an odd combo at first, their career paths and performative trademarks fit together like peanut butter and chocolate. In Chan’s storied action films and Knoxville’sJackassfranchise, both stars enthusiastically put their bodies on the line, eager to elicit equal parts jaw-dropping thrills and astonished gasp-laughs – all while emoting the hell out of their faces, heightening the standards ofBuster Keatonwith perilously relatable exasperation. And whileSkiptracedoesn’t reach the delirious heights of the performers’ previous work, I don’t think it’s designed to. Its screenplay spins a familiar-feeling cops-and-criminals narrative, flinging Chan and Knoxville as tasty dressing atop a pre-prepared salad. This is not to say Harlin’s staging of set pieces is something to scoff at –Skiptracehas a lot of fun not just with Chan and Knoxville’s chemistry, but with its grand, goofy, gripping visuals.

The Other Guys

Director: Adam McKay

Writers: Adam McKay, Chris Henchy

Cast: Will Ferrell, Mark Wahlberg, Eva Mendes, Michael Keaton, Steve Coogan, Ray Stevenson, Samuel L. Jackson, Dwayne Johnson

If you loved watching Mark Wahlberg’s comedic chemistry with Winston Duke, why not watch him achieve a similar-yet-different level of synergy withWill Ferrell?The Other Guys, the perfect bridge betweenAdam McKay’s silly comedies and muckraking dramas, is a curious watch, a purposeful deconstruction of both its stars screen presences, and a very, very fun action-comedy. Ferrell is playing in an appealingly lower register, eschewing his typical “loud, confident idiot” persona for a calmer, more mild-mannered voice of reason – a look he wears well. And Wahlberg is absolutely unhinged, weaponizing his underrated sense of “emotional desperation” into a brilliant piece of comedic acting – his detective is like if his character fromThe Departedabsolutely lost his marbles and got scared of everyone. From its prescient plotting to its MVP supporting cast (Michael Keatonforever and ever, amen),The Other Guyshas smarter-than-you’d-expect fun to spare.

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Blitz Patrollie

Director: Andrew Wessels

Writer: Kagiso Lediga

Cast: Joey Rasdien, David Kau

The low budget South African-madeBlitz Patrollie, from the makers of popular South African sketch comedy showThe Pure Monate Show, is a curious, delightful, completely atypical watch. Its narrative feels like many of the films on this list, and a little likeHot Fuzz: Two cops in a sleepy small-town Johannesburg precinct accidentally stumble across a huge criminal conspiracy, with one cop insisting on playing things by the book and another cop eager to play “action hero.” But its visual construction charms the pants off of you and sticks out from its slicker brethren because of how inherently unslick it is. you’re able to tell the picture was stuck together with a microbudget, and directorAndrew Wesselsboth leans into his limitations, selling the hell out the screenplay and letting his performers have fun with it, but also elevates his limitations with deft compositions and pieces of excellent visual comedy direction. WatchingBlitz Patrolliereminds me of watching early MTV shows likeThe Sifl and Olly Show– it’s a peculiar, handmade tone that, if you can give yourself over to, will fast become a hard favorite. WatchBlitz Patrollieand make it the cult classic it deserves to be.

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