The Bad Boys are officially coming for us as and Martin Lawrence were spotted filming for the upcoming sequel.
Fans were sent into a meltdown in January when as Mike Lowrey and Marcus Burnett respectively.
Details are still scarce on the fourth flick but new pictures have emerged, showing the stars on set.
In one photo, from Georgia, , including guns, badges and bulletproof vests.
They seemed to have been caught up in the action as a body lay across the ground in front of them.
Will and Martin announced that Bad Boys 4 was on the way at the beginning of the year, in a video shared on Instagram.
‘It’s official y’all! Bad Boys for Life. FOUR,’ they screamed to the camera, while bickering over the title.
The first Bad Boys movie was released in 1995 and the sequel later followed in 2003, .
Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah have returned to direct the action, and Chris Bremner in charge of the script.
Will is serving as producer beside Jerry Bruckheimer, Doug Belgrad and Chad Oman, while Martin is named as executive producer with James Lassiter, Mike Stenson, Barry Waldman and Jon Mone.
Little else is known about the upcoming instalment, which comes after 2020’s effort managed a whopping $426million at the global box office.
In the film, the close bond between the officers was tested after Mike was injured – and was almost Ki**ed off entirely.
In the flick, Isabel Aretas accidentally shot her son, Armando, after he realized that Mike is his father – she had been aiming for the officer but hit her son instead.
‘We didn’t know how to wrap it up necessarily. So that’s why we had to try multiple versions. We did a lot of different versions,’ director Adil told Digital Spy.
‘One of the potential endings, which ended up being a favourite among the pair, saw Isabel kill herself while trying to murder Mike.
‘When she sees that all is lost, she wants to jump into the fire willingly, and she wants to take Mike Lowrey with her. Because she thinks the son is dead, so let’s all die together.
‘That was a version that was pretty epic and pretty Greek tragedy. It was too much, maybe [but] we’ll never know.’