Adil & Bilall (birthnames:
Adil El Arbi, Bilall Fallah) are Belgian-Moroccan filmmaking partners who have become much sought-after directors for major Hollywood franchises, particularly the Jerry Bruckheimer-backed
Bad Boys series. Adil & Bilall have been a filmmaking duo since meeting at Belgium’s Sint-Lukas film school, as co-filmmakers on features and shorts since 2014—except for two shorts (Adil as writer of
Broeders (2011); Bilall as editor of
Patient Zero (2016)).
Adil & Bilall were directors/writers/editors of their debut feature,
Image (2014), followed by their acclaimed second feature with a cast of amateur actors,
Black (2015), which premiered at the Toronto Film Festival where it won the festival’s Discovery Award. Adil & Bilall then made (as directors/writers/editors) a short film,
Hashtag (2017), and then returned to feature film mode as directors/writers/editors of
Gangsta (2018), with Matteo Simoni, Gene Bervoets, and Axel Daeseleire.
Adil & Bilall made their huge leap to Hollywood as co-directors of the enormously successful revival of the Bad Boys franchise,
Bad Boys for Life (2020), reuniting stars
Will Smith and
Martin Lawrence, with new cast members
Vanessa Hudgens, Alexander Ludwig, Paola Nunez, Charles Melton, and Kate del Castillo, and proving to be the franchise’s highest grosser with a $426.5 million return for Columbia Pictures/Sony Pictures Releasing. Adil & Bilall were co-directors and co-writers (with Kevin Meul and Jan van Dyck) of the terrorism-themed thriller,
Rebel (2022), starring Aboubakr Bensaihi and Lubna Azabal, which premiered out of competition at the
Cannes Film Festival before a release by BAC Films/Wild Bunch.
Adil & Bilall returned to helm the fourth
Bad Boys movie, the $100-million-budgeted
Bad Boys: Ride or Die (2024), again starring Will Smith and Martin Lawrence and with new cast members Eric Dane, Ioan Gruffudd, Rhea Seehorn, and
Tiffany Haddish, and again produced by Don Simpson/Jerry Bruckheimer Films via Columbia Pictures/Sony Pictures Releasing.