Taxi 5

Bernard Farcy returns as the iconic and incompetent Commissioner Gibert, now the Mayor of Marseille, alongside Édouard Montoute as Alain.

Released in 2018, is the fifth installment in the French action-comedy franchise Taxi , originally created by Luc Besson. It serves as a soft reboot, introducing a new generation of characters while retaining the high-speed car chases and slapstick humor that defined its predecessors. Plot Overview

The film holds a 0% critic score and a 25% audience score.

The story follows (Franck Gastambide), an elite Parisian police officer and exceptional driver who is demoted and transferred to the municipal police in Marseille. He is tasked with taking down the "Italian Gang," a group of robbers using high-powered Ferraris to pull off high-stakes heists.

Critics and long-term fans were generally less enthusiastic about this entry compared to the original 1998 cult classic.

Critics from The Hollywood Reporter described it as a "five-car pileup of a comedy," noting that its humor often targets the "lowest common denominator".

Taxi 5 Here

Bernard Farcy returns as the iconic and incompetent Commissioner Gibert, now the Mayor of Marseille, alongside Édouard Montoute as Alain.

Released in 2018, is the fifth installment in the French action-comedy franchise Taxi , originally created by Luc Besson. It serves as a soft reboot, introducing a new generation of characters while retaining the high-speed car chases and slapstick humor that defined its predecessors. Plot Overview Taxi 5

The film holds a 0% critic score and a 25% audience score. Bernard Farcy returns as the iconic and incompetent

The story follows (Franck Gastambide), an elite Parisian police officer and exceptional driver who is demoted and transferred to the municipal police in Marseille. He is tasked with taking down the "Italian Gang," a group of robbers using high-powered Ferraris to pull off high-stakes heists. Plot Overview The film holds a 0% critic

Critics and long-term fans were generally less enthusiastic about this entry compared to the original 1998 cult classic.

Critics from The Hollywood Reporter described it as a "five-car pileup of a comedy," noting that its humor often targets the "lowest common denominator".