As with many recent Pixar movies, Incredibles 2 isn’t a great, ground-breaking animated work with new emotional insight. They don’t do that as much any more, instead focusing on revisiting familiar characters and spending more time with them. It’s comfortable instead of challenging, but the result is still a good cartoon movie. (The studio provided a review copy.) I love the old-style staging of the film. Cars and clothes are retro, but the city has a monorail. Apparently, the setting […] | |
As with many recent Pixar movies, Incredibles 2 isn’t a great, ground-breaking animated work with new emotional insight. They don’t do that as much any more, instead focusing on revisiting familiar characters and spending more time with them. It’s comfortable instead of challenging, but the result is still a good cartoon movie. (The studio provided a review copy.) I love the old-style staging of the film. Cars and clothes are retro, but the city has a monorail. Apparently, the setting is intended to be an idealized mid-1960s. Another old-fashioned element is the story. I didn’t see this in the theater because the plot seemed so prehistoric. “Dad has to take care of the kids, comedy ensues.” It’s ridiculous to assume a father (Craig T. Nelson) can’t be as good a parent as mom (Holly Hunter), even back in the 80s when it was called Mr. Mom. I tried to view it as a story about how “parenting is hard” without getting caught up in the gender roles, although the movie makes that difficult at times. Handing off the child during the first big fight scene gets back to what KC always used to say about Legion of Super-Heroes comics — once there’s a kid, you always have to deal with who’s taking care of it.
Jack-Jack, though, is easily the best part of the movie. His random revolving powers allow for plenty of cool action sequences as well as lots of humor. The other kids get stereotypical plot lines: Dash (Huck Milner) struggles to learn math; Violet (Sarah Vowell) is worried about a boy. (Another old-fashioned approach to characterization.) Visually, it was neat to see how versatile the Elastigirl powers were. Overall, there were impressive action sequences, but I found the story lacking. The basic premise is the core concept behind superheroes. Do you obey the law or do you fight in spite of what the law says? I liked the name Screenslaver, but there were too many elements that just didn’t quite come together. I definitely appreciated being able to watch this at home, since it’s long, just about two hours. And there were a bunch of extras. The short Bao, about the conflict between heritage and family and assimilation, ran with the movie in theaters. There’s a new “Auntie Edna” short, too (5 minutes), which shows more of Jack-Jack’s powers, elaborating on the scene in the movie where she designs his costume. It’s unnecessary, since we already know the outcome, but fun.
“Strong Coffee: A Lesson in Animation With Brad Bird” (19 minutes) is as much co-workers talking about the writer/director as his words. It’s not very revealing, mostly just praise for how great he is. The commentary is by four animation supervisors, not him. The bonus disc has more special features.
I like discs with lots of extras, but this seemed like overkill. We were tired of it before it was done, much like the extra-long movie. Link : Incredibles 2 | |
News Anime , Manga & Comic: Comic.MangaOnlineFree.Com - Special pages News Anime and Manga prestige, world news Manga & Anime at your fingertips |
Thứ Hai, 26 tháng 11, 2018
Incredibles 2
Author Unknown
Published tháng 11 26, 2018
Next
Related
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
EmoticonEmoticon