Everything is not quite awesome but delightfully diverting nonetheless.
So it looks like the established trend with the unexpected success of “The Lego Movie” is that said franchise is going to be the ultimate victim of its success.
Make no mistake; “The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part” is
definitely good but in hindsight, it only makes sense that the revelation of
the original movie being a cross generational study of what its property means
to different mindsets and how the imagination its meant to inspire can bring
people together in the shape of a visually inventive comedy playing with the
tropes of a child’s playtime stories was something that could only leave a
whammy of an impact once, even if making it the foundation of a franchise can
work for multiple features, if slightly less effectively.
Set several years after the first movie, fulfilling the
promise at the end of having the child’s sister invited to play, the film picks
up in an apocalyptic Bricksburg in conflict with the citizens of Planet Duplo
in the Sis Star system. Seeking to save his friends after being abducted for
some sort of universe ending ceremony, Emmett (Chris Pratt) fights his way to the
Sis Star system, learning to harden himself for the challenging times from the velociraptor
taming, cowboy, space faring, adventurer Rex Dangervest (also voiced by Pratt).
If that synopsis didn’t make it obvious where the lines of
antagonism lie, “The Lego Movie 2” uses the perspective of an outside
contributor to the story being told as its core gimmick, with the older boy
clearly entering his awkward grim and gritty, dark and brooding, hardcore
content equals mature phase and having to figure out how to balance the
interference and intentions of a younger sibling he doesn’t relate to.
On paper that sounds like a fair set up but in execution, it
proves to be fairly rocky for the first half of the movie.
The visual direction keeps its characteristic pop and
cleverness but the story and character beats, outside of a few chuckle worthy
gags that land here and there feel far more worn and noticeably less fresh than
they did in either this movie’s immediate predecessor or its two spinoffs from
the previous year based on “Batman” and original Lego property “Ninjago.”
Nothing in it feels particularly bad per se but fairly flat
and pedestrian, especially when the nature of the plot’s metatextual framing is
a cat that has been long let loose out of the bag.
The introduction of Rex Dangervest’s obvious caricature of
Chris Pratt’s career shift as an actor circa 2014 and his endlessly amusing
army of raptors inject some much needed life into the production and I’d be
remiss if I didn’t give major credit where it’s due for a studio like Warner
Bros. to actively use its major public entertainment industry blunders and petty
rivalries, from which it’s still recovering, as fuel for legitimately funny
gags that are still seamlessly woven into the narrative they’re a part of.
Sadly, a lot of the script, at least as executed, just doesn’t
carry the same level of sharpness as its predecessor and occasionally falls
back on being too self referential about its status as an imaginative
manifestation of recreation and personal growth between figures existing beyond
the confines of the Lego antics happening onscreen.
Fortunately, the third act of “The Lego Movie 2” almost
pulls a complete 180 degree turn, as the exact nature of the sibling
relationship in question becomes more obvious, heralded by a twist regarding
the nature of Rex Dangervest that’s so brilliant in its obvious simplicity that
it almost singlehandedly torpedoed the criticism of the feature’s lacking subtlety
that had been sitting in my head for nearly an hour by the time it plays
itself.
The result is a final act that recontextualizes the film to
an end that is nowhere near as mind blowing as the first movie was but is
nonetheless clever, endearing, and heartwarming in all of the ways one would
hope for riding off of the first movie.
“The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part” definitely stumbles
through a fair share of growing pains but manages to still come out on the
other side proving its worth as a premium cinematic franchise that nobody saw
coming.
7 Bricks out of 10
No comments:
Post a Comment