Men in Black International

Men in Black International

Posted on June 13, 2019 at 5:49 pm

B-
Lowest Recommended Age: High School
MPAA Rating: Rated PG-13 for sci-fi action, some language and suggestive material
Profanity: Some strong language
Alcohol/ Drugs: Drinking and drunkenness
Violence/ Scariness: Extended sci-fi/comic book style peril and violence including weapons and explosions, some graphic images
Diversity Issues: None
Date Released to Theaters: June 14, 2019
Date Released to DVD: September 9, 2019

Copyright 2019 Columbia Pictures
So, you watch “Thor Ragnarock” and you say, “Boy, I’d watch Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson in anything!” And you watch the original “Men in Black” and you say, “Boy, this is one of the best movies ever, funny, smart, exciting, with wonderfully vivid and engaging human and non-human characters. I’d like to see more of this world.” And so, someone put it together and we have Hemsworth and Thompson taking over for Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones, and F. Gary Gray (“Straight Outta Compton,” “The Fate of the Furious”) taking over as director from Barry Sonnenfeld, and it turns out “Men in Black International” is just okay.

For example, among the many understated, near-throwaway jokes in the first movie, we saw a bank of television monitors tracking people on Earth who are in reality aliens. Unless you were watching it on a DVD player with a pause button, you would miss most of it, but the “aliens” included “Today’s” Al Roker, singer and psychic promoter Dionne Warwick, Tony Robbins, Sylvester Stallone, and fashion designer Isaac Mizrahi. They use the same joke again, but it’s just Ariana Grande. Really? That’s the best you’ve got? Much of what made the first film such a wonder was the sense that there was a fully-imagined, world where supermarket tabloids were the only non-fake news, that somehow made more sense than the one we think of as real. It never winked at its characters or the audience. This one goes for a cheap laugh by having Hemsworth reach for a sledgehammer. He’s Thor, get it?

Thompson plays Molly, who had an alien encounter as a child and was accidentally not neuralized with the MiB’s memory eraser. She helped the fuzzy green alien escape and even learned a couple of words of its language. Since then, she has been so obsessed with learning more about the way the universe works that most people, including the man who was impressed with her record on the tests for government service, dismiss her as nutty.

By tracking an alien arrival, she sneaks into the MiB office, where the director (Emma Thompson as Agent O) agrees to take her on for a probationary period and sends her to the London office, where the top agent is H (Hemsworth), whose character seems to be based on the roles Rock Hudson played in “Pillow Talk” and “Lover Come Back,” a rakish playboy who hangs out with aliens at card games and nightclubs. While he is a legend in the office for having defeated The Hive with his then-partner, Agent T (Liam Neeson), he has pretty much checked out, sleeping at his desk and annoying his play-by-the-rules colleague, Agent C (Rafe Spall). H takes a visiting alien dignitary out for a night of drinking and debauchery but things go wrong and the alien is killed, with just enough time to pass on to Molly, now Agent M, a small object that seems to be very important, but he does not tell her why.

This fourth in the “Men in Black” series owes as much to James Bond as to its original (in both senses of the word) off-best, off-kilter, world-building story-telling. Our heroes hop around glamorous and exotic settings: Paris, London, Marrakech, a mysterious fortress on an island. Characters and incidents from the past are confronted and characters from the present may not be what they seem. A new character, voiced by “Silicon Valley’s” Kumail Nanjiani nearly steals the film with a reminder of the understated but pointed humor of the first film.

It has an awkward twist that indicates some struggles over rewrites, but H and M are so blandly conceived that even two of Hollywood’s most versatile and appealing performers can’t make them vibrant.

Parents should know that this film includes action/comic book-style peril and violence, powerful weapons, mayhem, characters injured and killed, monsters, disturbing images, some strong language, and a non-explicit inter-species sexual situation and sexual references.

Family discussion: Why did H change after his experience with the Hive? What did M want to understand about the universe and were her questions answered? Which alien was your favorite?

If you like this, try: the other “Men in Black” movies and the comics, “Guardians of the Galaxy,” and “Paul”

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Summer Movies 2019: Superheroes, Sequels and Spin-Offs, Comedies, and Indies

Summer Movies 2019: Superheroes, Sequels and Spin-Offs, Comedies, and Indies

Posted on May 2, 2019 at 2:04 pm

I love summer movies!  And this summer is filled with long-anticipated blockbusters and under-the-radar indies.  Some I’m especially looking forward to:

Superheroes

Tom Holland’s Spider-Man, currently featured in “Avengers: Endgame,” will be back for “Spider-Man: Far From Home.”

X-Men’s Jean Grey gets her own cosmic ray transformation  in “Dark Phoenix.”

Want more from the X-Men universe?  We’ve also got “The New Mutants,” starring Maisie Williams, Antonio Banderas, and Anna Taylor-Joy.

Sequels and remakes

Copyright Universal Pictures 2019

Fans of the “Fast and Furious” franchise love Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson) and Shaw (Jason Statham), partly because of how delightfully they hate each other.  Dame Helen Mirren is back as Shaw’s mum, and Vanessa Kirby joins the cast as his sister. That’s why “Hobbs & Shaw” looks like one of this summer’s biggest treats.

Copyright Sony 2019

The stars of “Thor: Ragnarok” team up in “Men in Black: International,” starring Tessa Thompson and Chris Hemsworth, with Liam Neeson and Chris Hemsworth.  That little guy in the trailer is voiced by Kumail Nanjiani.  

James Earl Jones is back as Mufasa in the “live-action” (meaning CGI) remake of “The Lion King,” co-starring Donald Clover, Seth Rogen, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Keegan-Michael Key, Amy Sedaris, Billy Eichner, John Oliver, and Beyonce.

That great big lizard is back in “Godzilla: King of the Monsters.”

And the “street rat” is back, too, in the live-action “Aladdin,” starring Will Smith as the genie.

Keanu Reeves is back as the world’s smoothest assassin in “John Wick 3,” and this time Oscar winners Anjelica Huston and Halle Berry join the cast.  I just hope they go back to that cool hotel.

Get your handkerchiefs ready. The toys are back in town for “Toy Story 4.” Tom Hanks, Joan Cusack, and Tim Allen return, joined by Keanu Reeves, Jordan Peele, Keegan-Michael Key, and “Veep’s” Tony Hale.

Three generations team up in the latest “Shaft” movie, co-written by “Black-ish” showrunner Kenya Barris.

Patton Oswalt takes over the lead role in the sequel to the animated film about what our furry, feathered, and finned friends do while we’re at work and school, “The Secret Life of Pets 2”

We’ve had “Once Upon a Time” movies in the West, and Mexico — now it’s “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” directed by Quentin Tarantino, with a knock-out cast that includes Leonardo diCaprio, Brad Pitt, and Margot Robbie.

Olympus, London, and now Angel — in Gerard Butler’s latest “Fallen” movie, he has to protect himself, this time from an attempt to frame him in an assassination plot.

“A Dog’s Journey” continues the story of “A Dog’s Purpose,” with Josh Gad returning as the voice of the title pooch.

For the Kids

“Dora the Explorer” is a teenager in her first live-action film. “The Angry Birds Movie 2” adds “This is Us” star Sterling K. Brown to the voice talent. And “Playmobil: The Movie” features “Harry Potter’s” Daniel Radcliffe.

Based on Books

“The Sun is Also a Star” tells a timeless story of romance in the context of a timely story of a young woman who meets someone she could love just as she is about to be deported with her family from the only country she has ever known.

Cate Blanchett plays an architect who is having trouble adjusting to a new city in “Where’d You Go Bernadette,” based on the best-seller about a mother who goes missing.

“Artemis Fowl” is based on the best-selling fantasy series about the criminal mastermind.

“The Kitchen” is based on comic books about housewives-turned-gangsters, with Melissa McCarthy, Elisabeth Moss, and Tiffany Haddish.

True Stories

“Rocketman” stars Taron Edgerton as Reg Dwight, who became Elton John.

“Trial by Fire” is the story of Camereon Todd Willingham (Jack O’Connell), a Texas man who may have been wrongly executed for starting the fire that killed his three daughters. with Laura Dern as the woman who befriended him.

Real Lives, Real Stories

Documentaries coming our way include “Hesburgh,” the story of the civil rights leader and  Notre Dame president who advised Presidents, Father Theodore Hesburgh, “David Crosby: Remember My Name,” about the rock and roll legend, “Mike Wallace is Here,” about the “60 Minutes” journalist, and “Framing John Delorean” about the rise and fall of the visionary car maker.

Indies to Watch Out For

Last year’s breakout star, Awkwafina, has her first lead role in the Sundance hit “The Farewell,” about a Chinese-American family who pretends they are gathering for a family wedding because they want to say goodbye to their grandmother without letting her know that she is dying. Fans of This American Life will recognize the story.

“Booksmart” is another festival darling, a sweet, very funny story from first-time director Olivia Wilde, about two girls who decide to have all the fun they missed in high school on the last night before graduation. Beanie Feldstein and Kaitlyn Dever give knock-out performances.

What if you were the only person who remembered Beatles songs?  That’s the idea behind “Yesterday.”

“Late Night” stars Mindy Kaling as a writer and Emma Thompson as the television late night host she goes to work for.

The latest from Jim Jarmusch is a zombie comedy called “The Dead Don’t Die.”

“Blinded by the Light” looks as endearing as the director’s “Bend it Like Beckham.”

Happy summer!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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