⭐ Ice Cube • Mike Epps • Chris Tucker • Katt Williams
🏘️ Comedy • Urban • Legacy
💫 “One block. One Friday. One last chance.”
THE FRIDAY THAT COMES FULL CIRCLE
After decades of laughs, quotable moments, and cultural impact, Last Friday (2026) brings the legendary franchise home for one final ride — and this time, the stakes are bigger than ever. Set in present-day South Central Los Angeles, the film confronts a reality many neighborhoods know too well: gentrification knocking at the door, ready to erase history brick by brick.
Craig Jones (Ice Cube) is older, wiser, and still sitting on the same porch that raised him. But the block that shaped generations is about to be sold off to developers, replaced by luxury condos that don’t know its name — or its people.
ONE LAST FRIDAY, DONE THE ONLY WAY THEY KNOW HOW
Craig doesn’t fight back with fists.
He fights back with community.
His plan? One final, unforgettable Friday — a massive block party packed with food, music, memories, and a last-ditch fundraiser to save the neighborhood. It’s part celebration, part protest, and part love letter to the block that made them who they are.
But it wouldn’t be Friday without chaos.
THE CREW RETURNS — AND SO DOES THE MADNESS
Smokey (Chris Tucker) rolls back into town claiming he’s changed — spiritually, mentally, financially — but absolutely no one believes him. Day-Day (Mike Epps) shows up running a sketchy “security company” that creates more problems than protection. And Money Mike (Katt Williams), now a viral influencer, turns the entire day into content — cameras everywhere, drama everywhere, and zero filters.
As outside saboteurs move in and tensions rise, old friendships are tested, new laughs explode, and time starts running out.
COMEDY WITH HEART — AND A POINT
What sets Last Friday apart isn’t just the jokes — it’s the soul. Beneath the outrageous humor is a story about identity, belonging, and what happens when the places that shaped us are pushed aside. The film balances classic Friday-style laughs with real-world relevance, proving that comedy can still say something meaningful without losing its edge.
A LEGACY WORTH CELEBRATING
Hilarious, heartfelt, and unapologetically real, Last Friday (2026) isn’t just a sequel — it’s a farewell. A reminder that while buildings can be torn down and streets renamed, the bond between people, memories, and shared history can’t be bulldozed.
Because some Fridays don’t end at midnight.
They live forever.