The film follows Agent J (Will Smith) as he travels back to 1969 to prevent an alien assassin named Boris the Animal from killing a young Agent K (Josh Brolin, stepping in for Tommy Lee Jones). This retro setting allows the film to indulge in 1960s kitsch—including a memorable visit to Andy Warhol’s Factory—while commenting on the era’s social tensions. However, the real triumph is Josh Brolin’s performance; he captures Jones’s iconic stoicism and dry delivery so perfectly that the transition between the two actors feels seamless.
While a fourth film ( Men in Black: International ) attempted a soft reboot in 2019 without Smith or Jones, its failure only solidified the strength of the original trilogy. Men in Black 3 -2012- serves as the perfect capstone. It closed the loop on J and K’s relationship, explained the origin of their bond, and gave Tommy Lee Jones’s character a nobility that the first two films only hinted at.
The film pushed forward with a kinetic elegance. There were chases through the underbelly of Coney Island, where rides creaked and aliens hid behind prize stands. There were moments of comic absurdity—men with neuralyzers forgetting their own names, funky gadgets that spat out cosmic gum—and moments of quiet that cut to the bone: J and K, in a diner at dawn, trading the kind of talk that feels like confession when it's late and the world is still waking. The arc of the story carried both light and gravity because it was, at its core, about the cost of protecting someone you love by hiding the truth from them.