Warning: this one’s gonna be particularly grumpy, snarky, and perhaps even
downright rude!
I have to say, before watching this abomination, I felt a little for poor
Universal. After all, the company is so late out of the gate for its own movie
universe (which is called “Dark Universe” for good reason, seeing as how much
the film at hand disapproves of using colours or light), all the good talent in
front and behind the camera willing to invest their time and abilities into a
concept this corporate has already been grabbed by the competition, so seemingly
the only creatives still for hire are those without the talent or conviction to
make anything of their own or to get hired by anyone but Universal. Apologies to
the people involved who weren’t actually responsible because they were
mind-controlled by alien wasps or something in that line.
That’s at least how I explain The Mummy to myself; it is definitely
not explicable as anything the people involved put even a tiny bit of their
hearts and minds in, resulting in a film as bland and drab as this sort of
blockbuster can possibly get. Why, I’d even prefer a Michael Bay movie – those
things are at least loud, tacky and dumb, whereas The Mummy really
can’t find enough enthusiasm to even be any of that.
The writing – an effort that took at least the six credited minds,
apparently – is bland, perfunctory and not just assumes the audience to be
stupid but thinks we are actual zombies. How else to explain the film’s tendency
to repeat certain micro flashbacks again and again, never mind it is flashing
back to scenes that happened only fifteen minutes earlier, or that it’ll use the
same flashbacks again in another twenty. “Remember that dagger we told you about
ten minutes ago, and thirty minutes ago, and forty minutes ago, monkeys? I’m
sure you don’t, so let me reiterate via micro flashback!”. It’s not just an
offensive, exasperating and tedious way to tell – or rather repeatedly exposit
about – a story, it also again and again stops the film in its tracks when it
threatens to actually start going.
Then there’s of course the little problem that the script is supposedly about
a charming rogue finding redemption through an act of sacrifice but never
actually manages to establish him as anything but an asshole, or rather,
believes that giving a woman in a crashing plane a parachute is a clear sign of
his buried humanity, or that falling in love is. Cough, Eva Braun, cough. Let’s
not even talk about that self-sacrifice which isn’t even one, or about the way
the romantic triangle is written. Or rather, not written. Or about the weird
plot omissions, the rather important plot elements a film this exposition heavy
somehow still doesn’t explain (probably because it’s too concerned with
repeating crap even a Hollywood director would understand four or five times for
its oh so stupid audience).
On the side of just strange – instead of mind-numbingly bad – things about
the script, there is a bunch of borrowings, throw-backs or downright idea theft
(depending on a viewer’s tolerance for this sort of thing) from other, much
superior, movies, particularly Tobe Hooper’s wonderful Lifeforce and
John Landis’s An American Werewolf in London. I have no idea what to
make of that; but then, I have no idea how anyone involved in the movie can have
thought anything about it was a good idea.
Not that there’s much spectacle going around to distract one from the
script’s failings, either. The big action set pieces lack any imagination, are
indifferently staged, blandly directed by Alex Kurtzmann (whom I now have under
suspicion of being a robot, so mechanical is his work here, though the rumour
mill suggests Tom Cruise steamrolled him with good old fashioned box office
magnet power and is in fact responsible for this crap), and edited with a nearly
absurd lack of style and enthusiasm. Given the budget involved, you’d at least
expect a visible degree of craftsmanship, but there’s little sign of where the
125 to 150 million dollar budget actually went. Even the lighting and the music
are bland and drab like ugly, grey little table cloths.
Well, a not inconsiderable part of the budget certainly went into the pockets of Tom Cruise,
giving his worst performance of the last ten years or so. Cruise’s outing
consists of GIF-worthy grimaces, wooden dialogue delivery (admittedly, the
dialogue is pretty wretched anyway, so even an actor couldn’t have improved on
it much), and an astonishing lack of screen presence. Cruise also doesn’t have
the tiniest bit of chemistry with his female co-actors, which is a bit of a
problem that’s supposed to be some sort of supernatural love triangle. To be
fair to the old man, Annabelle Wallis’s performance is nearly as bad as Cruise’s
– she’s just not grimacing as much – just barely less wooden as whatever it was
Bryce Dallas Howard did in Jurassic World. Russell Crowe (as Jekyll and
Hyde) for his part waddles through his scenes clearly in search of his pay check
so that he can finally leave the set. The only thespian on screen who is
actually putting effort in is Sofia Boutella as our titular mummy but she
suffers from the fact that the film as a whole doesn’t really seem to have much
of an idea what to do with her, and the need to interact with the living void
Cruise. She’s a good villain in desperate search of a better film, or really,
any film at all.
Sunday, September 10, 2017
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