Bad Boys

Bad Boys may refer to:

In film:

  • Bad Boys (1961 film), a 1961 film by Susumu Hani
  • Bad Boys (1983 film), a 1983 film starring Sean Penn
  • Bad Boys (1995 film), a 1995 film starring Will Smith and Martin Lawrence
    • Bad Boys (soundtrack), the soundtrack album
    • Bad Boys II, the 2003 sequel to Bad Boys (1995)
  • Bad Boys (2003 Finnish film), a 2003 film starring Peter Franzén

In music:

  • Bad Boys (Baccara album), an 1981 album (and song on it) by Spanish duo Baccara
  • Bad Boys (DeBarge album), 1987
  • Bad Boys (Haywire album), 1986
  • "Bad Boys" (Wham! song), a 1983 song by pop duo Wham!
  • "Bad Boys" (Inner Circle song), a 1987 song by Inner Circle, used in the film and TV show COPS
  • "Bad Boys" (Alexandra Burke song)
  • "Bad Boys", a song by Whitesnake from their 1987 album Whitesnake
  • "Bad Boys", a song by Shyne from his 2000 debut album Shyne

In musical groups:

  • Bad Boys Inc, a British boy band

In television:

  • Bad Boyes, a 1980s British television series
  • Bad Boys, a Japanese owarai duo hosting the variety show AKBingo!

In video games:

  • Bad Boys: Miami Takedown, a video game based on the Michael Bay films

Other:

  • The Detroit Pistons basketball team, known as the Bad Boys in the late 1980s to early 1990s
  • Böse Buben (German for Bad Boys), an association of gay men in Berlin, Germany

Famous quotes containing the words bad and/or boys:

    One of the grotesqueries of present-day American life is the amount of reasoning that goes into displaying the wisdom secreted in bad movies while proving that modern art is meaningless.... They have put into practise the notion that a bad art work cleverly interpreted according to some obscure Method is more rewarding than a masterpiece wrapped in silence.
    Harold Rosenberg (1906–1978)

    But boys and girls, pale from the imagined love
    Of solitary beds, knew what they were,
    That passion could bring character enough
    And pressed at midnighht in some public place
    Live lips upon a plummet-measured face.
    William Butler Yeats (1865–1939)