Saturday, December 21, 2019

Jumanji: The Next Level Review - Sloppy but Satisfying

SPOILERS BELOW
     The first Jumanji movie was a simply enjoyable movie. There wasn't a lot of complications or deeper themes to it, the characters were all pretty one-dimensional and the story was very simple. And because of this, the movie worked perfectly. That's not to say there weren't problems with it, but none of them actively took away from the movie. The simplicity of the movie allowed the creators to sharpen every little aspect of it to make what might  be the most enjoyable movie possible given the story. All the characters got put into just the right avatar to move their arc forward, the multiple lives of a video game setting to forward the "you only have one life" concept was pretty clever, and you could tell that every single actor was having a blast. Also we got Jack Black pretending to be the popular, blonde, high school girl which is perhaps the greatest thing ever. Jumanji 2 (or 3 I guess?) doesn't quite stick the landing quite as well. And this is most likely due to both the two year time frame to create the movie, and a more ambitious plot.
     Where Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, had a very basic high schooler coming into their own plot, The Next Level tries for (vaguely) more complicated themes about getting old and losing connection with your friends. And to the movie's credit, you can see a rather good set-up to explore those themes. Spencer (Alex Wolf/Awkwafina/Dwayne Johnson/boy this movie does not want to make naming the actors for these roles easy) is struggling moving on from high school and the distance that creates between him and his friends so he retreats back into the childhood comfort of playing video games instead of addressing these problems. Then you have Grandpa Eddie (Danny DeVito,  Dwayne Johnson, Awkwafina) as a cautionary tale to Spencer if he follows this path. Eddie has not been able to move on from working at the restaurant that he co-owned with Milo Walker (Danny Glover/ Kevin Hart) and is now a grumpy old man who resents his old age, resents the new restaurant that took the place of what once was his restaurants, and resents Milo Walker for forcing him into retirement. Heck, Spencer and Eddie even have the same two avatars during the movie. 
     All of the actors bring their A game once again and appear to be having even more fun than originally. The weird green water plot device, although strange and relatively inconsequential to the plot (we'll get back to that), does allow all the actors to just go crazy. Dwayne Johnson and Kevin Hart are having an obvious blast playing elderly people having no clue what's going on. Karen Gillan mostly sticks with what she had in the original, but she has a fun scene as Fridge, even if it is short-lived. Awkwafina seamlessly inserts herself into the Jumanji cast, playing both Spencer and Eddie flawlessly. Nick Jonas doesn't really have anything new or exciting to do but he does his job fine enough. Oddly enough, it's Jack Black that seems to have the most trouble out of the cast, but that's really only in comparison to his phenomenal work in the first one. His Fridge, simply isn't quite as engaging as either Kevin Hart's or Karen Gillan's and definitely is nowhere close to matching his Bethany. 
     The biggest problem with the movie is that it simply isn't as tight as the first one, Fridge (Ser'Darius Blain/Jack Black/Karen Gillan/Kevin Hart) seems to only be in the movie because he was in the first one, and, although Spencer is supposed to be the main character, he's missing for most of the first act of the movie. This confuses who the lead is for the movie, sometimes it seems to be Martha (Morgan Turner/Karen Gillan/Jack Black), sometimes it seems to be Eddie and sometimes you have no idea who it is. Additionally, the body swapping gimmick, while amusing, did not really add anything to the plot. The only reason why it was in there was so that the star cast could have amusing, new characters to begin with but let them play their normal characters again for the climax, which doesn't make much sense because the whole point of the first (or second) Jumanji movie was to allow them to play amusing, new characters so now that they seem to be tied down to specific characters it kinda takes away from the inherent fun of the Jumanji franchise that Sony has set up for us. Maybe it's not that big of a deal, but the way I see it, there really was no narrative reason for the characters to go back to their avatars from the first movie, and there is something more inherently exciting in never knowing who to expect Jack Black or Dwayne Johnson or Kevin Hart or Karen Gillan to be playing every time a new Jumanji movie comes around. If we know that eventually we'll see The Rock return to the nerdy shy character it takes away a bit of the fun. Although if Jack Black wants to play Bethany in all the movies from now until the end of time that's fine with me.
     In the end, Jumanji: The Next Level is a worthy follow-up to the original (or the sequel), even if it's more uneven and is not quite as funny as the original. Still the actors are having as much fun as always and it will always be a joy to see actors playing against their type. The magic of Jumanji is still there, even if not everything else is.

P.S. The horse was nice for a one-joke thing, one that I wish wasn't spoiled in the trailers and promotional imaging, but wasn't very interesting other than that.

P.P.S. The after credit scene sets up an interesting concept for Jumanji 3 (or 4). However, if they fully follow through with it, I'm unsure how they plan on bringing their star cast back.

Personal Rating: 8/10
Entertainment: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Depth: ⭐⭐⭐☆☆
Story: ⭐⭐☆☆☆
Comedy: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Tension: ⭐☆☆☆☆
Acting: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Directing: ⭐⭐⭐⭐☆

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