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Black is not the new Black
The "Men in Black II" are back to save us from the out-of-this-world
vermin. But who the heck is out to save us from the utter piffle of
this sequel's 'alien'-ating existence? Frank tells you exactly why
you shouldn't be seeing this rubbish, here.
Film review by Frank Ochieng
Men
In Black II
Date Released: 07/03/2002
Rated: PG-13 (for sci-fi action and some suggestive humour)
Length: 94 minutes
Produced by: Walter F. Parkes, Laurie MacDonald
Directed by: Barry Sonnenfeld
Cast: Will Smith, Tommy Lee Jones, Lara Flynn Boyle, Johnny Knoxville,
Michael Jackson
Distributor: Columbia Tristar
The temptation is always there in the world
of movie sequelitis. The formula is quite evident: wait a few years
after the tremendous box office showing of the original flick then
milk the profits for what its worth in the next installment.

You then try to secure the services of the film's previous stars
(the recently Oscar-nominated Will Smith from "Ali" and Oscar-winning
stoical actor Tommy Lee Jones) along with its noted director Barry
Sonnenfeld provided that they're not too big or proud or expensive
to partake in the sequel festivities.
Then whammo...you count on the moviegoers to help duplicate the
cinematic financial efforts that your prior blockbuster project
had benefited from earlier. In the world of moviemaking, it's as
easy as 1-2-3!
In the much-anticipated follow-up of Smith and Jones's rayban sunglass-wearing
agents out to control the cretins that threaten our way of life,
"Men In Black II" is back for more 4th of July holiday sci-fi high
jinks at the box office. Giddy Agent J (Smith) and his stone-faced
partner Agent K (Jones) are poised to do battle with the ever-so-evil
and bothersome extraterrestrials in what amounts to be a rehashed
collection of stale jokes and aimlessly highfalutin' special effects.
Clearly this film doesn't have the spontaneous luster or madcap
silliness of its goofy predecessor that made it such a hoot when
it caught movie audiences off guard back in 1997. Somehow, off-kilter
references to alien invasions doesn't seem as funny or enticing
as it did five years ago.
"Men In Black II" is content with resting its laurels on the familiar
loose banter of its intended mismatched costars, a beloved wiseacre
talking pug dog sidekick named Frank (hmmm...I kinda like that name)
and a host of creepy wormlike critters--all designed to invoke the
nostalgic nuttiness of yesteryear's box office hit.
The movie's cute tagline is: "same planet, new scum". It's too
bad that Barry Fanaro and Robert Gordon's ("Galaxy Quest") script
couldn't conjure up new ideas and forge progressive insights to
go along with the film's new-kid-on-the-block variety of scum.
Anyway, the plotline is simplistic in nature. The film introduces
an intergalactic villainous vixen named Serleena (Lara Flynn Boyle
from ABC-TV's "The Practice") who happens to control the feisty
buggers that J and K and their agency must combat vigorously. In
the meanwhile, J has no choice but to work with different partners
because K has some form of amnesia (I thought this was only reserved
for sitcom plot contrivances?) that's preventing him to be the effective
alien-fighting agent he once was.
But J needs K to snap out of this mental funk because K could be
the instrumental figurehead in finding out the whereabouts of a
gadget known as the McGuffin (or something to that effect).
Both J and K need to seize that weapon before Serleena and her
slimy odd squad get their paws on it. Should K's memory lapse continue
and Serleena succeed in securing this destructive device, the planet
Earth will be in a whole mess of trouble.
Can the Men in Black do their thing and save our bacon once more
amid the tacky turmoil? Look, does a laser gun from the Starship
Enterprise sting when it hits you in the gut?
What made the original MIB movie so unique was its hokey charm
because it was conceived as a one-note irreverent vehicle with the
spunky yet erratic special effects to go along with the dopey-looking
bug-eyed species that gave this movie its unexpected appeal.
The original film wasn't necessary a winner to begin with because
the unevenness of the satire fell flat more often than not. But
the devilish wink-wink attitude of the film's stars, particularly
Will Smith's incessant smugness, made MIB a palatable guilty pleasure.
However, here "MIBII" struggles with its slapstick mode that comes
across as annoyingly outdated and indifferent. Sonnenfeld directs
this cockeyed and sporadically witty space-aged sci-fi yarn with
the urgency of having a bee buzzing around in his britches. The
quips by Smith and Jones's characters feel forced and schmaltzy.
There's simply a sense of shiftless direction to this excitable
showcase that just doesn't quite make it suitable the second time
around.
Smith and Jones revisit their dark-suited personas with a dose
of convincing enthusiasm but their hilarious brashness from a handful
of years ago only magnifies itself as sheer empty-headed arrogance
in this updated version that needlessly labors at being hip and
flippant. Flynn Boyle is not too memorable as the witchy and wily
goddess of goons Serleena.
She's weak-kneed and too breezy in the unctuous department. Johnny
Knoxville (the jackass dude from MTV's "Jackass" series) signs on
as a two-headed alien and is merely uneventful in the process. And
the adorable Rosario Dawson (from "Josie and the Pussycats") is
wasted as the hinted love interest of Smith's Agent J.
Her character development can be likened to that of an umbrella
stand in the corner of the room. If there's any semblance of the
magic that emigrated from the first film, then it's in the form
of Tony Shaloub ("Big Night") returning as the put-upon alien with
the blast-off, blast-on head not to mention the caustic wiggly worm
bandits out for some chaotic fun.
When all is said and done, trusty Will Smith fans will probably
head to the aisle seats and watch Mr. July pack 'em in as he only
knows how to do around this time of the hotbed movie season.
Smith does have a proven track record and if you're willing to
gamble with his impressive summertime clout as Sonnenfeld has done
in the past (okay, we'll overlook the Sonnenfeld/Smith collaboration
on the summer miscue "Wild, Wild West" from a few years ago), I'm
sure the tedious antics of the pointless "Men In Black II" will
be acceptable in your universe.
But as one who'll see this meager sequel for what it's really worth,
I suggest you hope that J and K and all the other alphabetical elements
blast themselves and join their gruesome adversaries in movie oblivion.
Frank rates this film: ** stars (out of 4 stars)
Frank Ochieng
(c) Frank Ochieng 2002
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