BOTTOM
LINE:
On it's own, this film
is a major disappointment. When compared to the previous Mummy films,
it's even more disappointing. None of the fun, adventure or thrills
are present in this botched, insipid outing which does not come
anywhere close to the standard set by the previous entries in this
franchise.
THE
GOOD: Being the
third entry in the Mummy series, it was time to change direction
away from Ancient Egypt and the filmmakers chose to exploit ancient
Chinese history by basing this Mummy on an ancient Chinese Emperor
(a perfectly cast Jet Li) who ruled millions in Ancient China but
was put under a curse by immortal queen Zi Juan (again, a perfectly
cast Michelle Yeoh) for killing her lover General Ming who was the
Emperor's right-hand man. Imprisoned in stone, a warning was placed
throughout history never to lift the curse otherwise the Emperor
will rise and enslave the human race. Basically it's the same plot
as the previous films just with different scenery and actors which
is fine; you do not expect more than that from a film like this.
Brendan Fraser is back as Rick O'Connell, and together with Evie
(a re-cast Maria Bello) they go to China on a mission but subsequently
discover that their son Alex (Luke Ford) has dug up the Emperor
and put him on display in the Museum. Before you can blink, a group
of Chinese soldiers awaken the Emperor and all hell breaks loose.
The rendering of Jet Li as the Mummy this time around is different,
but well done. He's clay based, as with his Terracotta army, and
has control over the five elements which means he can do cool things
like breath fire and make sharp icicles to impale his enemies. Michelle
Yeoh is great as the character of Zi Juan, providing much of the
explanation as to what the Emperor is up to and what they need to
do to defeat him. An unexpected surprise was the use of the Yeti,
or in this case, three of them, who come to the aid of our heroes
on request. The film has a couple of interesting things in it, but...
THE
BAD: This film is
an excellent example of studio/committee based crap designed to punch
out the formula in the hope of generating the expected amount of revenue.
I have no doubt that Mummy 3 will pull in its hundreds of millions,
but the sheer lack of quality, direction and fun in this installment
will turn the audience away from this franchise when it didn't need
to be. The reason both The Mummy and The Mummy Returns worked was
because of an inspired sense of direction and staging by director
Stephen Sommers (who isn't a master by any means, but he is a solid
director). Rob Cohen on the other hand does not seem to have any touch
on the material; the film is lifeless, poorly shot and insipid. The
actors look like their going through the motions. I felt sorry for
Brendan Fraser; the poor guy not only had to repeat his old performance
but he had to play it against Maria Bello, who is a good actress,
but she cannot replicate the character of Evie as Rachel Weisz did
leaving Fraser looking like he's lost most of the time. Alex's character
isn't that great; I actually hoped he would turn in to Mummy fodder
at some point. The epic first on screen battle between Jet Li and
Michelle Yeoh is massively underwhelming; not only is it not that
long, but it's not well done. The rising of General Ming's undead
army works initially, but ultimately pushes the film in to an over
reliance on CG, which is a fault of all the Mummy movies, but somehow
because the rest of the film doesn't work then this doesn't either.
Overall, I walked out of this film disappointed that I had wasted
my money on it and hoped that the franchise can rest before it gets
worse than this lame-duck effort.
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