MADEA AND BIG MOMMA
Comedy Legends Collide. The System Never Recovers.
In 2026, two of the most iconic forces in comedy history finally crash into the same universe—and nothing survives unchanged. MADEA AND BIG MOMMA isn’t just a crossover. It’s a full-blown comedic event that turns undercover crime-solving into pure, unapologetic chaos.
Starring Tyler Perry, Martin Lawrence, and Kevin Hart, the film brings together generations of comedy with one simple question: What happens when nobody follows the rules—and everyone is louder than the law?
When Disguises Fail and Chaos Wins
The story follows Madea and Big Momma as they go undercover on a case that was never designed to survive their methods. Surveillance becomes impossible. Interrogations collapse into insult battles. Every attempt at “procedure” is immediately replaced by yelling, threats, prayer, cooking, and emotional oversharing.
Nothing goes according to plan—mostly because there is no plan.
Each scene escalates the madness, transforming stakeouts into street arguments and police operations into family reunions nobody asked for.
Comedy with Teeth
While the laughs come fast and loud, MADEA AND BIG MOMMA hides a sharp edge beneath the chaos. The film playfully—but pointedly—questions authority, justice, and who gets taken seriously in the system.
Who decides what’s “proper”?
Who gets ignored?
And why do the loudest voices often speak the most truth?
Through outrageous humor and fearless performances, the film turns social commentary into comedy without ever slowing down the fun.
A Cast Built for Controlled Mayhem
Tyler Perry’s Madea arrives with zero patience and unlimited opinions. Martin Lawrence’s Big Momma brings legendary unpredictability and comedic muscle. Kevin Hart acts as the unfortunate middle ground—trying (and failing) to keep order while everything collapses around him.
Their chemistry fuels the film, creating a relentless rhythm of jokes, clashes, and unforgettable one-liners.
More Than a Comedy—A Takeover
Brash, fearless, and intentionally chaotic, MADEA AND BIG MOMMA proves that comedy doesn’t need subtlety to be smart—and doesn’t need permission to be honest.
This is a film where rules are optional, volume is mandatory, and laughter is unavoidable.
 Loud. Lawless. Hilarious.
MADEA AND BIG MOMMA (2026) — because sometimes the system doesn’t need fixing.
It needs to be shouted at.