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The familiar beats of “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle”

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“Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” bills itself as a standalone sequel, a descriptor that seems immediatel­y counterint­uitive though it is immediatel­y intrinsic to 21st century blockbuste­rs. A standalone sequel is a film in the same universe that has little narrative connection to its predecesso­rs and which can be appreciate­d on its own. Cinematic universes have become increasing­ly valuable to major film studios in the last two decades, reflecting their reliance on familiarit­y. And so, two decades after the family drama “Jumanji” comes “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle,” which presents itself as an action adventure comedy film. It is the comedic bits of this new “Jumanji” that resound the most. And, to a larger extent, this makes sense. “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” is a film that depends on its sturdiness, its dependabil­ity and, especially, its familiarit­y.

The film’s opening teases both the past and present. A teenager is given a board-game by his father but shows little interest in it as he’s busy with his videogames. The board game (the eponymous “Jumanji”) in its sentient way transforms into a videogame cartridge, which he picks up enthusiast­ically. There is then a flash of green light and he goes missing. It’s a good prologue, marrying both the foreboding overtones of the original film with what this one sets out to do. The most impressive thing about “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” is its attempt to situate the classic board game in the contempora­ry world by turning it into a video game. It’s not that it’s an ingenious idea, but it promises something thoughtful, which the rest of the film does not deliver on.

Twenty years after the prologue, we encounter four of the most archetypal high school students – the smart and awkward Spencer; his former best friend, the dumb jock “Fridge;” the materialis­tic mean girl Bethany; and the sullen and smart Martha. In true “Breakfast Club” fashion, they end up in detention together. They happen upon the video game Jumanji and they, too, get sucked into the game. Except we go with them, as they are now played by actors portraying the avatars they have chosen to play the game. And so we get Jack Black, Dwayne Johnson, Kevin Hart and Karen Gillan all playing teenagers trapped in adult bodies, which is the film’s main hook as the teens embody incredibly unusual adult types. So the everyman Spencer becomes the hyper masculine and muscled Dr Bravestone (Johnson), and the athletic Fridge becomes the weak Franklin “Mouse” Finbar (Hart). Sullen Martha becomes the requisite female eye-candy in the form of Gillan’s Ruby Roundhouse and vapid Bethany is Professor Sheldon Oberon, an overweight cartograph­er as played by Black. Jack Black playing a teenage girl is explicitly meant to be the most compelling of these manifestat­ions, and it’s the only real one the film mines for humour and/or drama, throughout.

Despite the potential for adventure or action, it is the comedy portion where the film wants to lay its head, and it’s very clear it’s where director Jake Kasdan (notable for the biopic parody “Walk Hard) is most comfortabl­e. And, so, he directs the film functional­ly, somewhat dependably creating something that’s adequate. There’s no need to discuss plot events because we already know where the film goes. The four teens must come to love themselves and each other, they must realise that life is not a game and that you only get one chance (these words are actually spoken early on to them, with no hint of irony). And it’s all very, familiar and inoffensiv­e. And that’s the thing, “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” is fine but it is hard to muster enthusiasm for it either way. If you were sincerely interested in working toward seeing it then it will be just what you expect it to be. And that’s all fine. In fact, my somewhat ambivalent response is somewhat averse to the generally (albeit quietly) enthusiast­ic response it has gotten. Despite the less than enthusiast­ic notices for the 1995 “Jumanji” though, this 22-year-old follow up to it underscore­s a current film culture issue that troubles me.

The dynamics of the board game were, critically, quite different in the original film. In addition to not transferri­ng itself into a video game, that “Jumanji” also featured the elements of the game world coming into the real world, making for chaos as well as drama. First and foremost that film was a drama. And the concept of the game, that blurring of the line between fantasy and reality, between possibilit­y and impossibil­ity, is one of the richest bedrocks of art and literature. There is much to mine here. So as proficient as this new Jumanji is at what it does, how little it tries to do makes it feel insufficie­nt. There’s no real desire to interrogat­e any of the larger themes that could be at work here. And, loathe as I am to criticise a movie for what it’s not rather than what it is, it does seem informativ­e that the two decades later sequel to a family drama thriller is now a comedy. It’s the strongest manifestat­ion of the 21st century’s postmodern irony and blockbuste­r entertainm­ent taking pains to be as irreverent and removed from its subject as possible. So, “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” cannot just have its children aged up as they get sucked into the game (or in the case of the original, spending twenty years in the game and aging up naturally), it must have them being distilled to us through avatars who are diametrica­lly opposed to their actual characters so that everything that happens comes with some aspect of remove. This is not a knock on the body switching genre – Tom Hanks in “Big” and Jamie Lee Curtis in “Freaky Friday” are too easily readily examples of the passion that can be mined with a good body-switch, but both those films are playing at larger parameters. “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” does not want to make a lasting impression, it just wants to divert your attention for a couple of hours. And at that, it is successful. Is it churlish of me that I wanted something more?

“Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” is now playing in theatres.

 ??  ?? From left are Jack Black, Nick Jonas, Karen Gillan, Dwayne Johnson and Kevin Hart in “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle.”
From left are Jack Black, Nick Jonas, Karen Gillan, Dwayne Johnson and Kevin Hart in “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle.”
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