Times Colonist

Jumanji sequel serves up stars, good-hearted fun

- LINDSEY BAHR

Jumanji: Welcome To the Jungle 3D Where: Cineplex Odeon Victoria, Cineplex Odeon Westshore, Landmark Cinemas University Heights, SilverCity Starring: Dwayne Johnson, Karen Gillan, Jack Black, Kevin Hart Directed by: Joe Johnston Parental advisory: PG Rating: 2 1/2 stars (out of four) More than two decades after Robin Williams conquered that pesky board game, Jumanji has been resurrecte­d with more and glossier stars (Dwayne Johnson, Kevin Hart and Jack Black), a comedy director and a “modern” twist. The result, Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, is a sweet, and generally entertaini­ng body-swap lark with some nice messages about being, and believing in, yourself.

Why it had to be Jumanji is the headscratc­her. Even speaking as someone who was 12 when the first came out, and genuinely enjoyed the Joe Johnston-directed adventure and the fantasy of being swept up in a board game come to life, the idea that a die-hard Jumanji fanbase exists, or that the “brand” is so rock-solid that it needs a reboot, seems dubious at best.

There are pointless sequels everywhere of course, and questionin­g the purpose for their existence is a fruitless exercise. The only reason I bring it up here is because Jake Kasdan’s Welcome to the Jungle spends a fair amount of genuinely unnecessar­y time straining to justify how it is connected to Jumanji, including a whole prologue establishi­ng how it had evolved into a video game by 1996.

The conceit here is that when you’re transporte­d into the game, you are suddenly a character in the game, in body, voice and skillset, but with your earthbound personalit­y pretty much intact. This is how a group of mismatched teens sharing the same detention, including the nerdy, shy Spencer (Alex Wolff), the football player Fridge (Ser’Darius Blain), the superficia­l popular girl Bethany (Madison Iseman) and the too-smart for gym class Martha (Morgan Turner), transform into avatars played by Dwayne Johnson (Spencer), Kevin Hart (Fridge), Jack Black (Bethany) and Karen Gillan (Martha).

It’s a role reversal for everyone — the nerdy girl is hot now (and scantily clad), the hot girl is a soft, middle-age man, the skinny guy is the Rock and the big football player is now tiny and wimpy — and they all have to go through the stages of learning to accept their new bodies, talents and shortcomin­gs.

There is of course a lot of easy comedy in these situations — Spencer admiring his new muscles and Bethany getting used to her new anatomy among them. And all the main actors/avatars are kind of great at imitating the facial expression­s of their teenage counterpar­ts, especially Johnson and Black.

How can you argue with a bunch of movie stars acting goofy and hawking a “believe in yourself” message? There are some odd beats and choices, especially around Gillan’s Martha, who is costumed in nearly nothing (surely as a send up of what female characters usually wear in video games, but however meta it might have been intended to be, it is still literally her costume). There’s also a plot line that hinges on her learning how to flirt from Bethany (because they all decide that flirting with the bad-guy security guards is the only way they can get past them). Maybe it’s all in good fun, or maybe one of the four credited screenwrit­ers could have been a woman.

But Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle probably doesn’t warrant that much scrutiny. Its surface pleasures are strong enough for a fun holiday afternoon at the movies.

 ??  ?? Karen Gillan, left, Jack Black, Kevin Hart and Dwayne Johnson in Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle.
Karen Gillan, left, Jack Black, Kevin Hart and Dwayne Johnson in Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle.

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