RIDE ALONG (12A, 100 mins) ** Starring Ice Cube, Kevin Hart, Tika Sumpter, John Leguizamo, Bryan Callen, Bruce McGill, Dragos Bucur, Laurence Fishburne. Director: Tim Story.

These are golden times for stand-up comedian Kevin Hart.

His most recent tour, Laugh At My Pain, and the TV special Let Me Explain were hugely popular, and he also currently has two films raking in the dollars at the US box office including this mismatched buddy comedy. It’s difficult to see what the fuss is about.

Neither as hilarious as it should be, nor as thrilling as it could be, Ride Along shifts lazily through the gears as its protagonists clash during a 24-hour police patrol of Atlanta and unwittingly stumble into a far bigger case involving a shadowy criminal mastermind.

Story’s film has echoes of last summer’s riotous romp, The Heat, starring Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy, albeit without the belly laughs or winning screen chemistry between the leads.

The script boasts a couple of arresting one-liners and some slick action set pieces, but we’ve screeched down these mean streets countless times before. And with a sequel to Ride Along already in the pipeline, it seems we’re doomed to suffer the blare of police sirens once again next year.

High school security guard Ben Barber (Hart) is a videogame junkie, who has been romancing his girlfriend Angela (Sumpter) for two years.

Her brother James (Ice Cube) is a highly-decorated detective in the Atlanta Police Department, who thinks Ben is unworthy of Angela’s affections.

In order to prove himself, Ben applies to join the police academy and against the odds, he gets in.

Unfortunately, James is unimpressed and concocts a cunning plan to get Ben out of his life forever – he invites the rookie along on a 24-hour patrol of the city with the intention of throwing his partner into explosive situations that will end in humiliation.

The plan works a treat, until Ben’s nerdy video-game knowledge uncovers a clue that could lead to most notorious criminal in Atlanta.

Ride Along knows its audience and panders to them, allowing Hart to riff and wise-crack while Ice Cube rolls his eyes and gets on with solving the case.

The 100-minute running time drags and the resolution to the animosity between the two men strains credibility.