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We've
been awfully fortunate this summer thus far.
There haven't been any over-hyped turkeys like Pearl
Harbor, Godzilla or Wild
Wild West stinking up the place. Instead, we've been dazzled by Minority Report and Spider-Man,
and cheered the maturity of films like The
Bourne Identity and The
Sum of All Fears (not to mention the upcoming Road To
Perdition). Disney's
Lilo & Stitch was one of their
best summer flicks in years, and the new Star
Wars installment didn't even suck too much ass.
The
sequels aren't half bad either, at least if you're talking about
Men In Black II. The
good news is that it's a lot better than the original.
The bad news is that the original wasn't anything to
write home about. More
good news is that the film is really short (87 minutes).
More bad news is that MIB2's quick running time
probably has a lot to do with the front-end deals gobbled up by
the two stars, director and producers (they're taking 50% of the
first $200 million it grosses, so a shorter film means more
screenings, perhaps helping it to reach that barrier more
quickly). Other
good news? Michael Jackson has a cameo.
Other bad news? He
isn't playing an alien.
At
the end of the 1997 film, Agent K (Tommy Lee Jones, Space
Cowboys) had his mind erased (I prayed someone would
neuralize me right around that same time).
As MIB2 opens he's working as a Postmaster in a
small Massachusetts town, while former partner Agent J (Will
Smith, Ali) has pretty much become
the same efficient Men in Black agent that K used to be before
he got zapped. The new film starts with a pre-credits Peter
Graves-hosted clip from one of MIB's operations from the '70s.
There's some nonsense about Kylothians and the Light of
Zartha, but it basically explains how K saved the world back in
1977.
Flash
forward to present day, when the whole Kylothians/Light of
Zartha thing has once again reared its ugly head.
A tiny yet extremely dangerous alien named Serleena
arrives in a ship straight out of Pikmin, transforms itself into
a Victoria's Secret model (Lara Flynn Boyle, The Practice)
and proceeds to search for the Light of Zartha.
According to MIB Chief Z (Rip Torn, Freddy
Got Fingered), the only agent capable of stopping
Serleena is K, so J is sent to Massachusetts to un-neuralize him
and bring him up to speed.
See? Now
they've swapped roles. Once
the pupil, J has now become the teacher.
So MIB2 is, like, a whole new film, right?
Not
really. Some of the
same characters are back, like Tony Shalhoub's pawnshop owner
Jeebs and Frank the Dog (voiced by Tim Blaney), while the
absence of others (like Linda Fiorentino) are casually touched
upon as if they barely ever existed.
David Cross is here again, but he plays a different role.
There are some new folks, too, though most of them
(Patrick Warburton and Johnny Knoxville) appeared in director
Barry Sonnenfeld's last film (Big
Trouble). Rosario
Dawson (Sidewalks of New York)
is cast as J's love interest, though there isn't enough time
devoted to this subplot to make it work (ditto for J's
depression, which is only briefly touched upon in the first
third of the film). In
addition to the Michael Jackson cameo, we also see a lot of
Martha Stewart, which is weird because of that whole talking dog
thing in Sonnenfeld's Trouble.
Acting-wise,
Smith is at his comedic best.
I usually can't stand the sight of him, but he made me
laugh several times. Watching
Jones is like watching paint dry, and Boyle looks more like
Sherilyn Fenn than Sherilyn Fenn does these days.
The scene-stealer here is Frank the Dog, who pulls off
the only successful use of "Who Let the Dogs Out?" in
the history of modern cinema.
On the downside, the product placement might be the most
blatant ever (MIB2 often plays like a super-long
commercial for Sprint – maybe all they would pay for was a
87-minute movie). One
couldn't expect anything other than an uneven film from a script
cobbled together by the funny Robert Gordon (Galaxy
Quest, Addicted To Love) and the
opposite-of-funny Barry Fanaro (Benson, The Golden
Girls, Archie Bunker's Place).
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for
sci-fi action violence and some provocative humor |
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