Pacific
Rim: ****/*****, or 7/10
Guillermo
Del Toro's epic hommage to the Japanese 'Kaiĵu' movies, produced on
a bigger budget than all such giant monster movies of the last fifity
years combined. Del Toro obviously has a great love and respect for
the genre, resulting in a very catchy action flick, undoubtedly the
best American counterpart to its Japanese predecessors. One might
almost say Hollywood has redeemed itself for the 1998 version of
Godzilla, but such a statement had better be held back for
another year, until the next American reboot of Godzilla hits
theatres in 2014. In the meantime, Pacific Rim works well as an appetiter to the big G's resurrection. An extra-dimensional rift opens on the bottom of the
Pacific and huge beasts come pouring out, wreaking havoc on mankind
as they lay waste to cities and obliterate our armed forces. Humanity
quickly sets aside its internal differences and joins forces in
creating big robots to fight the creatures on their own terms.
Piloted by a pair of human Avatars, these so-called 'Jaëgers'
effectively combat the beasts, but the life of a Jaëger pilot as Del
Toro reveals is filled with personal loss. When the monsters emerge
ever more rapidly from the Breach, as it is named, Jaëger command
develops an intricate and dangerous plan to halt the Kaiĵu threat
once and for all. Del Toro briefly explores the history of the first
Kaiĵu assaults and the development of their robotic antagonists and
afterwards spends more time getting us invested in the human
characters than is usual for this type of film. It does make the
movie feel like its dragging its feet for a while, until he unleashes
the action the audience craves with a vengeance, resulting in over an
hour of nigh endless monster bashing. Unfortunately he cannot help
but inserting a few characters that are supposed to deliver some much
needed comic relief to make sure we don't take it all too seriously,
but sadly these characters – stereotypical geeky scientists as ever
we've seen them – are so mind-boggingly annoying (Charlie Day
particularly) they make you wish for a Kaiĵu to step on them to end
their endless whining. Del Toro's talents are beter suited in delving
deeper into a world where Kaiĵus are not only a threat to world
peace but also big business: toy companies produce action figures of
them, creepy cults worship them and in Hong Kong, a 'Bone Town' is
established, a black market for Kaiĵu products for shady purposes, similar to the
disgusting existing South-East Asian trade in animal parts. Run by Ron Perlman (always a joy when paired with Del Toro),
some of the funniest, wittiest and anatomically most unsettling
scenes take place here. Though the dealings and the history of the
Jaëgers are fleshed out to the fullest, their enormous alien adversaries,
ever the most important ingredient in a Kaiĵu film, do remain
somewhat underexposed by comparison. Unfortunately their motivations
– they're really foot soldiers out to cause as much damage to
mankind as possible, in order to pave the way for an invasion from
their (smaller) intelligent overlords – remind us of the recent
Shyamalan flop After Earth, a movie we'd rather forget
entirely. Usually, Kaiĵu are more antiheroes than full-out villains,
but Del Toro opts to keep them a simple threat to be wiped out
instead of embuing them with a more sympathetic character like their
forebears Gojira, Gorgo and Rodan, who were
always the victim of human (nuclear) folly, transforming them into
avenging gods to remind us of our place in the world. The movie is
dedicated to Ray Harryhausen and Ishiro Honda, two people who only
too well understood the need to layer their creatures and make them
charm you so you feel more for them, but in this instance, Del Toro
decided not to go with such wisdom. As a result, Pacific Rim
at best is a highly likeable action flick, but not necessarily an apt
lesson for western audiences into the true nature of the Kaiĵu
genre. Then again, there's only so much you can do with the notion of
giant robots bashing giant monsters. Let's say Guillermo gets as much
out of that premise as we could hope for.
Despicable
Me 2: ****/*****, or 7/10
Simply
fun sequel to the animated surprise hit of 2010. Gru and his legions
of minions are back, but no longer driven by the need to exact evil
schemes on an unsuspecting world, as Gru (still voiced with a outrageously hilarious accent by Steve Carell) has taken to his role as a father
figure for his three orphan girls Edith, Agnes and Margo quite
seriously. The big question on the girls' minds of course is – much
to Gru's chagrin – 'when will there be a surrogate mother too'?
Apparently several thousand minions are not enough to fill that
particular role, so Gru has to endure countless matchmaking on their
part. Fortunately for him, he quickly finds himself abducted by agent
Lucy (Kristen Wiig returning for the sequel, but voicing another
character) of the AVL, the American Vampire League Anti Villain
League, who means to recruit him to smoke out a threat to world peace
apparently hiding in a shopping mall, potentially posing as one of
many goofy shop owners. Gru hesitantly accepts the job, if only to
escape his girls' endless romantic pestering. Needless to say, Lucy
and Gru soon get romantically entangled while attempting to stop the
outrageously stereotypically Mexican baddie El Macho (Benjamin Bratt)
from completing his vile scheme to unleash thousands of vicious
purple monsters (most of them harvested from Gru's own minions) on
mankind. Though the plot leaves little room for narrative surprises,
the infectious charm of the characters and a plethora of witty jokes
for young and old make for a thoroughly enjoyable animated flick. As
before, it's the endearing minions that steal the show – a fact
that has already been confirmed to deliver them their own movie next
year, which may not be such a good idea – but thanks to the
effective emphasis on Gru's own plot line, including a flashback to
his youth which is both sad and superbly funny, it also becomes ever
more evident just what a droll character he is himself, considering
he spends most of his time without his minions and vice versa, while
the movie doesn't end up either boring or less hilarious whenever
either party takes center stage (also thanks to Wiig's obvious enthusiasm). Though more attention on an original
plot would be welcome for the unavoidable next installment, I can
unabashedly say I'm looking forward to a Despicable Me 3 regardless. Preferably with both Gru and
minions together once more instead of one or the other.
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