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MIIB: Men In Black II
Video: Columbia Tristar Home Entertainment/Amblin
Entertainment. CVR 32718. 84 minutes. Price: varies upto £11.99
(UK) so shop around
If
ever there was a film waiting with expectations, the sequel to the
original ‘Men In Black’ was one of them.
I watched this film with some knowledge that it
had poor box office sales and reviews. Often when I hear such things,
I tend to keep an open mind when watching. I mean, I’m hardly jaded
by going to the cinema regularly after all.
OK.
Synopsis first. Agent Jay has to restore Agent Kay’s memory because
he needs him to locate what a renegade Kylothian monster is looking
for - which is a secret - and has taken over their headquarters.
With such a simple plot structure, how can it go so wrong?
Will Smith’s character, Agent Jay, in the first
film had the attitude to look cool in any situation especially when
he discovers aliens are co-existing with us on Earth. The problem
is that we re-join him in the sequel, he’s changed rather radically.
Very soft-hearted, he uses the memory eraser to
wipe the memories of fellow agents whom he regards as being unhappy
in their jobs. Quite why his boss never questions this action is
never explored. Autonomy is one thing but it does raise questions
about the command structure.
The problem is that Jay comes over as being less
than cool and at times, rather blank-headed. Whether this was the
intention of either the scriptwriters, director or Smith himself
is debatable but it is a serious flaw.
If it wasn’t intentional then it certainly wasn’t
exploited enough to use it as a strength.
Tommy Lee Jones, as Agent Kay, still deadpans
but without the necessary foil seems lost in the story. There’s
very little difference in his character before and after getting
his memory back.
All right, so there might be areas of comparison
personality-wise but you’d expect to see some sort of cultural shock
adjustment between the two stages. They act together but Kay turns
Jay into a lacklustre side-kick with neither benefiting from the
transition.
In some respects, a lot of the in-jokes are variations
of what was done in the first film.
It’s a pity that no one was pushing to develop
it further rather than leave it at a ‘B’ movie level. With all the
money that was spent on this production, I’d have expected more.
When the alien dog gets the best lines, there has
to question marks over this production.
Where’s the memory zapper when you want one?
GF Willmetts
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