Tag Archives: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

“TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: MUTANT MAYHEM” Review (✫✫✫1/2)

Cowa-freaking-bunga. 

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem is the best ninja turtles movie we’ve ever gotten. Yes, even better than the classic 1990’s film. Like the turtles themselves, TMNT: Mutant Mayhem is bursting with personality, energy, off-kilter comedy, high-kicking ninja action, and a ton of heart. It may deviate slightly from the source material, but the essence of the turtles is all here. Or maybe it’s more appropriate to say “ooze.”

Retelling the classic turtles story for the modern age, TMNT: Mutant Mayhem follows our four teenage mutants as they grow up wanting to live a life beyond the sewer. When they were very little, their father Splinter (Jackie Chan) raised Leonardo (Nicolas Cantu), Donatello (Micah Abbey), Raphael (Brady Noon), and Michelangelo (Shamon Brown Jr.) to fear the surface world and trained them in the martial arts to defend themselves. But while Leo wants to follow his father’s wishes, his brothers are always getting into trouble whether they’re ordering extra pizza, sneaking out to the movies, or breaking windows with their ninja stars.

One day, the quartet of brothers get an idea — if they help bring in a master criminal who is threatening New York City, the world will see that they’re not monsters and will accept them as one of their own. The problem is they need to catch “The Superfly” (Ice Cube), a mass murderer whose face nobody has ever seen. With their nunchucks, katanas, sai, and bo staff in hand, the turtles come together to prove that humans don’t need to be afraid of mutants.

One of the things I’ve always loved about the turtles is that it’s a story about outsiders. Much like the Hulk and the X-Men, the turtles are a family of misunderstood heroes who are feared and hated by society just because they’re different from them. Yet, despite the fear and hatred they experience on a daily basis, the turtles always strive to do the right thing. Not because it personally benefits them or because it makes others see them differently, but just because it is the honorable thing to do.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem is a different story. While other TMNT adaptations have traditionally emphasized the “mutant” or “ninja” side of the turtles, Mutant Mayhem instead fully embraces the teenage aspect and allows them to be much more mischievous, rebellious, and even a little reckless — just like real teenagers are. We’ve seen action-hero turtles beat up a bunch of highly-trained assassins, as well as stealthy ninja turtles who silently stalk their prey at night. I’ve never seen a turtles movie where their biggest concerns are high school crushes, pizza toppings, and searching for a place to belong. That makes them so much more relatable and humanizes them to the point where we don’t see them as mutants, ninjas, or turtles, but rather as kids confused and hurt by a world that hates them so much.

I also love the animation in this movie. While clearly inspired by the recent success of Into The Spider-Verse, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem carries its own gross and pulpy influence that feels like it’s popping straight out of the pages of an Eastman & Laird comic book. The lines are scratchy and unrefined, yet illustrate whole and complete pictures. The character designs look uneven and bizarre, but emphasize specific traits relating to their personalities and mutations. And the frame rate is gorgeous, moving and flowing like a waterfall of heavily saturated colors. Remember how Spider-Punk looked in Across The Spider-Verse? Picture that for the entire movie, and you’d come pretty close to what it’s like watching Mutant Mayhem.

And in a day and age where the weakest part of most movies are the villains, I’ve got to give special credit to Ice Cube’s portrayal of Superfly. His arc mirrors that of the turtles in that he too is a mutant who has always been shunned by society, but he doesn’t possess the moral compass that they do — mainly because he never had a father figure in his life to teach him the difference between right and wrong. The fact that he and the turtles share the same struggles while simultaneously divided on their values makes their conflict so much more personal and compelling.

The best part? Superfly is a wholly original villain. While partially influenced by Baxter Stockman, Superfly did not exist in turtles media prior to this movie. It’s so refreshing to see an original idea work so well in a popular franchise, especially when many other live-action movie villains fail to be as interesting or intimidating.

The fast-paced ninja action you know and love is all here, and personally, I would argue some of the movie’s crazier action sequences are more exciting than even the live-action movies are. The pop-culture references are clever and copious, further emphasizing the teenage aspect of the turtles. And the comedic bits are spot-on and hilarious. This is probably the funniest ninja turtles movie we’ve ever seen, and the best part is it doesn’t have to sacrifice its serious or darker tones in order to remain fun and entertaining.

There are some differences from the source material that will bother some die-hard fans, namely with how the turtles acquire their ninja skills and how the movie ends. For me, changes are justified if they add to the characters and the world they’re living in, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem is filled with wild, gross, and weird characters that you quickly learn to fall in love with. Imagine all of the kids out in the world right now who sometimes feel as lost, afraid, and alone as Leo, Raph, Mikey, and Donnie do. And imagine how inspired they must feel when they look down the sewers knowing that they too can be a ninja turtle.

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“FANTASTIC FOUR” Review (✫)

Not so fantastic.

That’s it. I give up. We will never have a good Fantastic Four movie in this lifetime that will do Marvel’s first superhero family justice. We have had four live-action bouts with the Fantastic Four now. The first one was never theatrically released. The next two installments was campy melodrama that should have premiered on SyFy. Now we have the newest reboot, and it’s safe to say this movie deserved the fate that the first movie suffered from.

The Fantastic Four team consists of Reed Richards (Miles Teller), Ben Grimm (Jamie Bell), Johnny Storm (Michael B. Jordan) and his adopted sister Sue (Kate Mara), with the third wheel being Latverian computer whiz Victor Von Doom (Toby Kebbell), who is an anti-social douchebag that is spoiled, rotten, selfish, privileged, and self-obsessed. King Joffrey from “Game of Thrones” is more well-mannered than this POS.

If you know anything ever about Marvel movies, you know the formula. Person X gets caught in an accident. Person X gains super powers. Person X struggles with said powers. Person X eventually learns to control them, fight the obviously-labeled baddie, and then commits himself to a life of fighting crime. The only difference between Fantastic Four and the other Marvel formula movies is that it’s more obvious with this film. And it’s persons instead of person.

In hindsight, Fantastic Four is not easy to adapt into film. For one thing, their powers are so complacent. A rubber man, an invisible woman, a human torch, and a rocky troll is not the ideal superhero team I would line up to see. The other problem, though, is their comic book origins. Compared to other heroes such as Spider-Man, Daredevil, Iron Man, and Captain America, the tone with the Fantastic Four comics is much more lighthearted and even comical. Be honest: can you even keep a straight face with a name as silly as “Fantastic Four”?

All the same though, the concept doesn’t matter as much as the payoff. This movie could have worked. The members of the Fantastic Four have vibrant personalities and character traits that make them both memorable and likable. That’s the reason why Marvel’s first family has survived all these years: it’s because they’re enduring. People relate to them, and despite their meta-human circumstances, their problems and emotions with each other are all human.

We didn’t relate to them as superheroes. We related to them as characters.

That’s a problem for this movie, though, because this movie neither has personality or character. Good lord, where do I begin? When the lineup for this movie’s cast was announced, I was skeptical at first, and I was right to be. Not only can none of the actors hold the screen presence on their own: their chemistry with each other was disastrously non-existent. The cast didn’t even seem to really care about their roles. Every half-hearted expression, every line of dialogue and every motion seems disinterested and bland. Nothing works when these actors are on the screen together.

Teller, for instance, is an atypical and complacent scientist character, a step down from his bravado performance full of passion and drive in last year’s Whiplash. Kebbell is just as forgettable as Teller is, except he’s more of an asshole about it. Mara is beautiful but witless, her character cluelessly wandering about as if she’s there just so the studio can say they’re gender diverse. Michael B. Jordan, who is a standout in movies like Chronicle and Fruitvale Station, appears here just so the studio can say they’re racial diverse.

Side-note: I’m all about racial diversity in movies, but if you’re going to cast two actors as siblings, at least have them be the same race. Saying Mara’s character is adopted doesn’t count as being diverse. It’s an obviously cheap effort to be labeled “racially diverse.” If you genuinely want to be racially diverse, recast everyone as African Americans. Don’t put in a half effort.

But out of all of the actors, I feel the most bad for Jamie Bell. He’s not even on the screen for most of the film: he’s replaced with this ugly gargoyle reject that looks like a combination of John Cena with a pile of rocks. I’m not even kidding, he looks freggin’ horrendous. What were the visual effects artists thinking with this? I get that Ben Grimm is supposed to be this big, ugly figure, but not this ugly. Not the kind of ugly that makes your vomit turn inside out, then go back into your stomach. It offends me to think that Bell was basically thrown into the tracking suit and have his performance replaced by this ugly CGI creation. With the other cast members, they at least have the opportunity to give a convincing performance before they fail. Bell isn’t even given the opportunity to fail. His performance is canned the minute the visual effects artists placed a 3D model over him. You could have cast a stunt double in this same role and get the same result from it: a big, bulky figure that just stiffly sits and stands like he has to go to the bathroom really bad. I haven’t seen a CGI creation this putrid since the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles from last year.

The movie’s flimsy, indistinct plot is just as bad as anything else is. What is the plot of this movie? Four people get superpowers, mope about it for a few hours, then have their final battle 20 minutes before the movie ends. That’s it. There’s no character building here, no heart, no humor, no unique elements or surprises to this film that makes it stand out from the standard superhero fare. The Avengers was just as fun, if not more so, for its characterizations and dialogue as it was with its action. Guardians of the Galaxy was wacky, clever, in-cheek fun that had a blast roasting itself. Shoot, even the original Fantastic Four movies had more charisma than this. This movie was so downtrodden, so serious, and so stupidly depressing that I felt like I was watching gothic fan fiction of the Fantastic Four. If you thought Man of Steel was too dark for a superhero movie, you haven’t seen Fantastic Four.

This is a disinteresting, joyless, illogical, poorly acted, written, produced, and directed experience. The cast must have heard the film’s whimsical title and wondered if they were on the wrong set.

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