Teenage Mutant
Ninja Turtles: Out of the
Shadows
Dir: Dave Green
2016
***
2014's Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles wasn't
the greatest of reboots. The story was fairly horrible, it was full of
unnecessary human characters and the CGI was overcooked. The very same could be
said of 2016's sequel Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows. From the
outset, the CGI action is in your face and near impossible to watch. I watched
it in 3D and could only register half of what was happening at one time,
usually about five seconds after it had happened. I don't think this is down to
me being a miserable old git either, I have perfect vision, I just couldn't
take it all in comfortably. That said, there were times when the 3D effects
were amazing, usually in the far shots. New
character Eric Sacks from the previous film (played by William Fichtner) was
thankfully absent, as was minor character Beradette Thompson (Whoopi Goldberg).
Tohoru Masamune hasn't returned to play Shredder and neither has K. Todd
Freeman (Dr. Baxter Stockman) or Minae Noji (Karai). There was controversy in
2014 among Turtle fans when it was announced that the four heroes were to have
new voices and that fan-favourites Josh Pais, Robbie Rist, Brian Tochi and
Corey Feldman would be replaced. Some took comfort in Johnny Knoxville taking
one of these roles, he added a certain something to the film but even he wasn't
asked to return. This mass exodus of actors usually suggests trouble for a
franchise but I don't think caused any harm. I was more into Masters of the
Universe and M*A*S*K when I was a kid, Turtles was fun and I enjoyed it for its
ridiculousness but I was never hard-core fan. I was however a huge fan of the
computer game. This film seems to me to be a huge set up for a game I would
love to play. As far as the overall film goes, it is more of the same nonsense
really; Will Arnett's Vern Fenwick is still pointless and completely different
to the original character, the turtles are too big and are extremely annoying,
the dialogue is dazzlingly awful and Megan Fox looks faker than the CGI. Even
though it must have taken ages to create, it looks like it was rushed (indeed,
only half of Megan Fox's bottom lip seems to have been botoxed, a rush-job for
sure). No surprise then. However, there are a couple of elements to the film
that I absolutely loved. Fan favourites Bebop and Rocksteady were left out of
the sequel to the original film. They were seen as dated characters, something
the franchise should move on from and far too difficult to create in a
live-action film anyway. Originally created because Playmate Toys, toy-makers
of the original Turtle line, demanded more 'Mutants' to sell to the
kids, Bebop and Rocksteady are the epitome of the weird and wonderful (and
probably quite rushed) ideas that could only come from the late 80s/early 90s.
Products from my childhood, utterly ridiculous but irresistible to everyone
from that generation. They got the character down to a t. If that weren't
enough, the mighty Kraang is revealed as the film's big baddie. Seriously,
the most ridiculous cartoon character ever created and they made it work in a
live-action movie without changing him even slightly. What you'd hope was the
film's strong point but would guess would be the lowest, turns out to the best
thing about the film after all, exceeding all expectations. They even got the
voice right with Brad Garrett lending his vocal talents (although I was a
little disappointed that Roseanne
Barr didn't reprise the role, as she voiced Kraang in the animated series
between 2013-2014, I kid you not). My favourite character as a kid was always
Casey Jones and while I was thrilled that he makes an appearance, I felt that
he should have remained in character for more of the film but that said,
Stephen Amell did a good job. Many of the action scenes were impressive but
forgettable, all but one that is. There is an action sequence that involves an
airplane and the Brazilian rain-forest that is absolutely breath-taking,
especially in 3D. These combined elements make this rather silly reboot a
respectable three star film. I can hardly believe it myself but once you get
over the stuff we disliked from the first film, you might just find something
in the fast-paced silly escapism that isn't
completely detestable. Sure, the character development is terrible, they could have had far more suspense and the Kraang could have been the big surprise reveal but that would be taking it far too seriously. Dumb but very very fun, which I think was always Kevin Eastman's original intention.
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