Regina Leader-Post

Nut Job 2 serves children much more than their parents

Strange male-female dynamic at the heart of story hampers this animated sequel

- TINA HASSANNIA

There’s something eerily slimy about Will Arnett’s voice. It’s deep, velvety and rich with texture, sure, but then there’s that sinister undertone — a trait that would make for an excellent villain.

But Arnett has always been better as the loser type, such as Gob Bluth in Arrested Developmen­t. Arnett nailed the character’s lack of self-awareness about his own idiocy and narcissism.

That kind of character arc has a limit, and the actor has since moved on to more mature roles, like his depressive, substance-abusing characters in Netflix’s Flaked and BoJack Horseman.

Arnett also voices kids movies, and it’s an admittedly strange fit. In The Nut Job and now the unnecessar­y sequel The Nut Job 2: Nutty by Nature, Arnett plays

Surly, a lazy, purple squirrel whose buddies — a motley crew of city-park animals — scored a lifetime supply of nuts after they managed to shut down a corrupt Mafia-owned nut factory.

Surly doesn’t play by the rules. He wants everything to be easy. Contrastin­g Surly’s indolence is Andie (Katherine Heigl), a dogooder squirrel who champions hard work. Andie believes their miraculous food jackpot has made the gang a bunch of lazy, fat rodents.

She tries to encourage the young ’uns to help gather up as many dusty acorns as they can as a backup supply for winter. No one takes Andie seriously. (No one takes the practical female character seriously? Wow, how utterly shocking).

Despite Surly’s surliness and laziness, he’s somehow the leader of the pack. It’s hard to understand why Precious the pug (Maya Rudolph), Buddy the rat (Tom Kenny), Mole the mole (Jeff Dunham) and the rest of their rodent friends look up to Surly, given how mean-spirited he is, especially when he’s around Andie.

This is where Arnett’s voice-acting sticks out: That tinge in Arnett’s voice makes him sound almost a little too cruel.

He’s a bad nut, and his less than admirable behaviour is allowed, even celebrated, by his peers. He treats Andie horribly. And the film does very little to acknowledg­e this or give Andie any moments to put Surly properly in his place.

Nutty By Nature has bigger fish to fry, though, and once trouble arrives in the form of an explosion, a corrupt mayor and the bulldozing of the animals’ park for a carnival, the team has to put their difference­s aside and work together to take down the conniving city leader (Bobby Moynihan).

Surly, Andie and the crew also find help in a samurai army of Chinatown white-mice, lead by Mr. Feng (Jackie Chan), who is as cute as he is vicious.

With its heavily telegraphe­d morals and utterly boring plot points, The Nut Job 2 is an unremarkab­le tale. It serves kids better than their parents, because children will eat up anything featuring cute and fluffy animal characters.

But jokes are few and far between and the animation does shockingly little to play up the unique physical characteri­stics of its colourful cast of creatures, (except for Precious, the most obvious target, because pugs are as cute as they are ugly). The cartoonish­ly evil mayor lazily represents all the evil that is (Donald) Trump, but he’s as bland as an unsalted peanut.

While mediocrity in animated films continues to make adults yawn, what should raise an eyebrow in a film like The Nut Job 2 is the weird gender dynamic between Surly and Andie.

Is there romantic tension, or are they merely competitiv­e? He treats her like crap, so maybe there shouldn’t be a romance? Except, suddenly at some point there is, and how problemati­c is that? Oh well — a movie as forgettabl­e as this will quickly disappear into the summer haze.

 ?? ENTERTAINM­ENT ONE ?? Jeff Dunham, best known as an American ventriloqu­ist and standup comedian, voices Mole in The Nut Job 2: Nutty By Nature.
ENTERTAINM­ENT ONE Jeff Dunham, best known as an American ventriloqu­ist and standup comedian, voices Mole in The Nut Job 2: Nutty By Nature.

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