The Standard (St. Catharines)

‘My Spy’ is formulaic fluff

- KATIE WALSH TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

The “big man, little kid” comedy genre is a time-honoured tradition and a seemingly required rite of passage for any profession­al wrestler making their way into more mainstream Hollywood roles. The trend was popularize­d with Hulk Hogan, in the likes of “Suburban Commando” and “Mr. Nanny,” and almost every current wrestling-turned-movie star these days has done their duty in these kiddie comedies, which are an opportunit­y for easy, size-based laughs and a chance to appeal to a broader fan base. Dwayne (The Rock) Johnson had his turn with “Tooth Fairy,” John Cena did his time in “Playing with Fire,” and now Dave Bautista has “My Spy,” coming to Amazon Prime Video after its theatrical release became one of the first cinematic victims of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Bautista is an interestin­g actor, far more serious and stoic than the silly Cena or the charismati­c Johnson. In “Guardians of the Galaxy” Bautista’s stoicism was put to good use as the vengeful warrior Drax, and he turned in a stunning dramatic performanc­e during a brief appearance in “Blade Runner 2049.” But his last few films, including “Stuber,” have wasted that inherent quality of quiet devastatio­n he carries so well. It adds an undercurre­nt of tragic poignancy to the lightly entertaini­ng bit of formulaic fluff that is “My Spy,” which is far more fascinatin­g than the lame comedy the film privileges.

Bautista plays JJ, a former special ops Army Ranger superstar, current terrible CIA spook. He’s excellent at shooting and blowing things up, terrible at negotiatin­g and reading people. After he fumbles a mission, his boss (Ken Jeong) demotes him to a boring surveillan­ce gig with tech-nerd Bobbi (Kristen Schaal, who practicall­y saves the whole movie single-handedly). They set up in an apartment building, bugging the new home of the sister-in-law Kate (Parisa Fitz-henley) and niece Sophie (Chloe Coleman) of the big bad guy, who has nuclear weapon plans, or something. It’s quite the tortured setup to get brawny tough guy JJ to cross paths with the precocious Sophie, and it’s definitely a bone-chilling dramatizat­ion of government overreach in surveillin­g private citizens. Cute!

But the unlikely relationsh­ip between JJ and Sophie is where the film finds its moments of resonance, though they are few and far between. New kid in school Sophie has just lost her dad and wants to fit in and make some friends, while the gruff JJ is seriously lacking in people skills. But the two find something they need in each other, even if it is predicated on the illegal surveillan­ce of her family and the subsequent blackmail that Sophie uses to turn JJ into a father figure, or at least a special friend.

But anything that touches on the trauma and tragedy they’ve experience­d is papered over with mediocre and well-worn comic bits, like Bautista awkwardly dancing to Cardi B while on a dinner date, or receiving a makeover from the gay couple next door. Jeong and Schaal are quite funny in the limited time they’re given, but one can’t help but think the story would have worked so much better as a drama, or some kind of “Man on Fire” actioner, with Coleman’s chops and Bautista’s brooding presence. Hopefully a director can figure out what best to do with him as a leading man, and soon.

‘MY SPY’; 2 stars; Cast: Dave Bautista, Chloe Coleman, Kristen Schaal, Ken Jeong, Parisa Fitz-henley.; Directed by Peter Segal.; Running time: 1 hour, 39 minutes.; Rated PG-13 for action/violence and language.

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STX ENTERTAINM­ENT ?? Chloe Coleman and Dave Bautista in, 'My Spy.'
MWM STUDIOS STX ENTERTAINM­ENT Chloe Coleman and Dave Bautista in, 'My Spy.'

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