Total Film

power rangers

The cult kids show morphs into a mediocre movie.

- Matt Maytum

There’s a fundamenta­l misjudgeme­nt at the heart of Power Rangers, the latest franchise wannabe. It takes a property that could never be cool to anyone over the age of 12, and stuffs it to the gills with Breakfast Club- style teen angst. It’s impossible to fathom who it’s actually aimed at: too dull for kids seeking superhero thrills, too lame for anyone who might actually be in a position to relate to its protagonis­ts.

The borderline-edgy leads comprise fallen sports hero Jason (Zac Efronalike Dacre Montgomery), “on the spectrum” Billy ( Me & Earl’s RJ Cyler), ostracised cool girl Kimberly (Naomi Scott), surly Trini (Becky G.) and Zack (Ludi Lin), whose characteri­sation extends to having a sick mother. Jason, Billy and Kimberly meet in Saturday detention, crossing paths with the others at the site where Zordon (Bryan Cranston) – one of the original prehistori­c alien Rangers from the Cenozoic era – buried crystals that’ll give the new chosen ones powers. Reincarnat­ed as a disembodie­d mentor, Cranston suffers the indignity of acting through a lousy visual effect that’s basically a large-scale version of those pin-art contraptio­ns you pressed your face into as a kid. As well as receiving trite nuggets of mentor wisdom, the gang’s training only really covers performing suplexes.

It’s not entirely without merit. Director Dean Israelite ( Project Almanac) flaunts visual panache with a spinning 360-degree view from inside a car during a chase, while the team of photogenic outcasts aren’t entirely charmless, with Cyler getting most of the laughs. It also takes commendabl­e baby steps towards being a more progressiv­e superhero film, and includes a casual reference to one character’s non-heterosexu­ality. But any potential warmth is derailed with some misfiring decisions, including two-too-many wanking gags and an act of revenge porn that’s shrugged off as character building.

For viewers of a certain age, there will possibly be pangs of involuntar­y nostalgia when (finally) it’s morphin’ time: like the TV series, there’s a cheap-looking fight in a quarry. But by this point, it’s hard to feel invested in the stakes. Elizabeth Banks’ hammy baddie Rita Repulsa feels like she’s been transplant­ed from an entirely different, younger-skewing film, and the mythology feels not so much half-baked as raw. When the indistingu­ishable Zords assemble for some sub-par Bayhem, the budget VFX struggle to conjure much excitement.

It’s a meh climax to a reboot that feels misguided: when your film has such egregious product placement that Krispy Kreme becomes the source of all power in the universe, the buck has to stop somewhere.

 ??  ?? They just couldn’t work out why their school mates thought they were weird…
They just couldn’t work out why their school mates thought they were weird…

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