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Will Smith Shares Son Trey's Honest Reaction to His Movies

​​​​​​​View Date:2024-12-24 01:10:42

Will Smith will always keep it fresh for his prince.

In fact, the Oscar winner believes his 31-year-old son Trey Smith, who he shares with ex Sheree Zampino, provided him with valuable insight into Bad Boys: Ride or Die as one of the popular action saga's biggest fans.

"My oldest son Trey, he loves it," Will shared in an exclusive interview with E! News correspondent Will Marfuggi airing tonight, May 21, at 11 p.m. "He's the one that's into Call of Duty and all of that, so a Bad Boys movie for him is everything. It's the one he likes that his dad is doing."

Even though Will was initially hesitant to film parts of the movie—the fourth installment in the franchise—from a first-person perspective, he said Trey was the one who put his concerns to rest.

"It's interesting the younger generation loves the first-person perspective," the 55-year-old explained, referencing Trey's love of shooting games. "The older generation is like, 'Mhmm, we're not sure about that.'"

Will—who is also dad to son Jaden Smith, 25, and daughter Willow Smith, 23, with Jada Pinkett Smith—added with a laugh, "The kids are gonna love it."

As for the other Bad Boy? Martin Lawrence told E! News his children Jasmin Lawrence, 28, Iyanna Lawrence, 23, and Amara Lawrence, 21, are also fans of the movies.

"My daughters love them," the comedian said. "They call me the cool dad."

And looking back at just how far the Bad Boys franchise has come, Martin only has "love and respect" for his longtime costar.

"We together on this whole thing," he quipped. "You can't have me and Will in a room and there's no laughter."

Bad Boys: Ride or Die hits theaters June 7.

For more longstanding Hollywood bromances, keep reading.

The cup of good fortune has truly runneth over for the relatively new friends since they teamed up to buy the storied Welsh soccer club Wrexham A.F.C., which was promoted back to the English Football League after one season under new ownership.

"I consider him one of my closest friends," McElhenney told People of Reynolds in August, "and I didn't even know him three years ago."

It all started when Reynolds, touched by McElhenney's performance on a certain episode of It's Always Sunny in Philadephia, reached out over DM to let him know. They started chatting regularly and, after Reynolds found out it was McElhenney's dream to own a soccer team, they ended up in business before they'd even met in person.

Since then, their families have also "grown incredibly close," McElhenney said, "and even though we live on opposite coasts, we feel like we're right next to each other."

It's 40 years and counting for the actors' Boston-born friendship, which has transcended the trappings of fame and their 1998 wunderkind Oscar win for writing Good Will Hunting.

They finally joined forces to launch their own studio, Artists Equity, in 2022 so they could hang out more. And probably also to make quality movies.

"If you're lucky," Affleck told E! News at the premiere of their birth-of-the-Air-Jordan biopic Air,  "you can find a way to work with people that you love and then, as they say, you never work another day in your life."

The Scrubs stars remain close years after their TV medical licenses expired, and their quirky exuberance continues to translate in commercials and their hit rewatch podcast Fake Doctors, Real Friends.

“I realized we were gonna be best friends after season one," Faison told British GQ in 2020, "when we rented an apartment in New York together and every night we played ping-pong in our underwear."

And their friendship itself has a legacy. “I think we showed dudes that it's OK to be a little bit sensitive," Faison added. "It’s OK to be buds who say I love you. For a really long time that was looked at as a bad thing. We might not be the original 'bromance,' but we’re definitely the best version of what a 'bromance' is because we’re very comfortable with each other."

They're usually snapped partying on a yacht from much farther away, but occasionally these friends of 30-plus years put on jackets and attend an event with an official photographer.

In 2013, when they starred in The Great Gatsby together, Maguire told People that he and DiCaprio are "like any other buddies."

"There's a lot of laughing and chatting between us," he shared. "We enjoy doing a lot of things we have in common, like basketball. We like to play and talk about basketball."

Though their "feud" picked up in hilarity and visibility in more recent years, thanks to social media, their friendship dates back to Reynolds debuting his Deadpool character in 2009's X-Men Origins: Wolverine, one of Jackman's many outings as the quick-healing super-mutant.

And while their long-awaited reunion in Deadpool 3 remains unfinished while the SAG-AFTRA strike drags on, they continue to hang out—including at a certain New York Jets game where...something about some pop star cheering on a player from the opposing team.

After 25 years of friendship, the trio put their heads together and came up with the podcast SmartLess. Because it was either that or a banana stand.

"We love each other so much," Bateman told USA Today of the real feelings on display in their Max docuseries SmartLess: On the Road. "I feel like I'm my best self when I’m with them. I'm more parts of myself than I am with most people, aside from my family."

The wait for Godot wasn't nearly as existentially draining when these longtime pals shared a West End stage in 2009 and reunited on Broadway in 2013, a month after McKellen officiated at Stewart's wedding to Sunny Ozell

But while they met in the course of being classically trained British actors 20 years beforehand, McKellen and Stewart didn't truly bond until they played Magneto and Professor X in 2000's X-Men.

"We had adjoining trailers," Stewart recalled on Wired's YouTube series Web’s Most Searched Questions. "On those kind of movies, you spend more time sitting in your trailer than you do in front of the camera. So, Ian and I hung out together, drinking tea—and maybe in the afternoon, something a little stronger—and we got to know one another."

"The friendship started just because we’re very similar where we want to win," Mahomes said on TODAY of his longtime Kansas City Chiefs teammate, with whom he's won two Super Bowls. "But we like to enjoy life, too. We’ve kind of built this friendship of we’re gonna go out there and compete and we’re gonna enjoy it while we do."

Added Kelce, "You could tell the first day that Pat came into the building it was gonna be fun playing with him."

In addition to fierce rounds of ping-pong at Mahomes' house ("Travis has never beaten me"), the pals have gone on vacation and attended concerts together, and many of Kelce's childhood friends are now in Mahomes' regular circle.

And it has not gone unnoticed that the quarterback's wife, Brittany Mahomes, has been welcomed with open arms into Taylor Swift's squad, the ladies drawing eyes up to the visitors' suite with their own elaborate post-touchdown celebration.

"I need to talk to Travis because me and Travis don't even have a handshake yet," Mahomes quipped in an interview with sports radio station KCSP. "So I mean, they're ahead of the game on us."

Colbert's never had a problem with Stewart for the 20-plus years he's known him, their Daily Show-fostered rapport standing the test of time.

"We've never actually had a donnybrook," Colbert noted on a 2022 episode of the Late Show when his pal was in the guest's chair. "I have said things like, 'You can't wear a tie?' But that's not an argument, that's just disappointment."

They don't call the acclaimed filmmakers "The Three Amigos" for nothing.

In addition to having 11 Oscars among them, the trio are longtime friends and supporters of each other's work dating back to the earliest days of their careers in their native Mexico—and you can often find their names in the "thank you" credits of each other's movies.

"To walk this path, never lonely in your life, always with two friends that can hold you in failure and can celebrate with you in success," Iñárritu said during a January 2023 Netflix conversation with all three. "These two guys, without them, I would not exist."

After showing so much entrepreneurial flair on Breaking Bad, the actors went into business for themselves in real life, launching the mezcal brand Dos Hombres together.

"Bryan, he is my mentor, one of my best friends on the planet," Paul gushed to People in June. Added Cranston, "Equally, I love this guy."

In case you ever wondered who the dapper fellow in the hat was sitting next to Nicholson at Lakers games for the past 50 years, it's Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Lou Adler, record producer and co-founder of the famed Roxy on Sunset Boulevard.

"Same sort of social guys," Adler told LAist's Off-Ramp podcast, explaining why The Mamas and the Papas singer Michelle Phillips wanted to introduce him to her then-boyfriend in the early '70s. "And it was a real easy friendship."

Before they became the Lakers' most storied season ticket holders, Adler and Nicholson bought any seats they could afford and worked their way up (or down, technically) to their iconic courtside perches as they got more successful.

We'll drink to the immortal tie between the Vampire Diaries stars and founders of Brother's Bond bourbon.

"I have many friends," Wesley said in a 2021 SiriusXM interview, differentiating between mere friendship and what he shares with Somerhalder. "A brotherhood is where you know you're connected kinda forever in some sense."

After starring in the Tony Award-winning smash The Book of Mormon, Gad and Rannells were on a 12-year mission to work together again, finally finding the right vehicle in Gutenberg! The Musical! which reunited them on Broadway in 2023.

"I really only wanted to come back with him 'cause he's the only person who would perform with me," Gad humbly explained on The Kelly Clarkson Show. Rannells cracked, "And finally the restraining orders ran out."

A tad more seriously, reflecting on how he and Gad went through the Mormon phenomenon together, then both moved to L.A. at the same time, landed sitcoms that were both canceled, etc., Rannells said, "We got to go through all of it and I could look at Josh and be like, 'Oh, you know exactly what I'm going through right now.' It's very rare."

Watch E! News weeknights Monday through Thursday at 11 p.m., only on E!.

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