The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Cars 3 –Once more around the track, for old times' sake

- By Michael O’Sullivan

LIGHTNING McQueen's third time around the track is showing signs that Disney/Pixar's reliable “Cars” franchise may, after two popular and original installmen­ts in the series of animated tales about talking cars, finally be starting to run out of gas. To be sure, “Cars 3,” which centres on a cocky race car named Lightning (voice of Owen Wilson) and his fears of obsolescen­ce in the face of more high-tech competitio­n, still has enough fuel in the tank to drive the story across the finish line. But like Lightning himself, who roared into the hearts of vroom vrooming children and their NASCAR-tolerant parents 11 years ago, there isn't quite as much pep to the film's narrative engine on this trip.

“Cars 3” opens with Lightning losing to a new, state-of-theart rival called Jackson Storm (Armie Hammer), a hotshot who trains on a video-game-style simulator and boasts a host of technical improvemen­ts that give him an edge over everyone else in the Piston Cup circuit. The fictional racing series includes appearance­s, on- and off-track, by such real-life personalit­ies as former drivers Darrell Waltrip, Jeff Gordon and Richard Petty.

The film's puns, once clever, are sometimes groaningly forced here.

Many beloved characters from the earlier films return, including vehicles played by voice actors who have since died. Paul Newman - as Lightning's late mentor, Doc Hudson, appearing in flashbacks - delivers lines that were recorded before the actor died in 2008. So, too, does Tom Magliozzi, who, with his brother and fellow “Car Talk” host Ray, plays one half of Lightning's sibling corporate sponsors, Rusty and Dusty. Aging hippie VW bus Fillmore (originally voiced by comedian George Carlin) has been played by Lloyd Sherr since the second film.

But these reminders of time's relentless passage are not the real reason that “Cars 3” feels like it may be time for a tradein. Nor is it that these reminders are underscore­d by a plot that explicitly addresses letting go of the past and the appearance of several old-timer car characters, notably an ancient pickup truck named Smokey (Chris Cooper), who becomes Lightning's new trainer, offering the advice that the old ways are the best ways.

It is the film's reliance on the underdog-victory formula that feels stale. OK, there's a little kink in the plot where Lightning - always a bit of an egoist, despite receiving comeuppanc­e in the earlier films. Jackson Storm may be the souped-up face of the future, but the movie feels more like a quiet ramble down memory lane.

 ?? — Disney-Pixar photo ?? Jackson Storm (voice of Armie Hammer), a frontrunne­r in the next generation of racers, posts speeds that even Lightning McQueen (voice of Owen Wilson) hasn't seen, in “Cars 3.”
— Disney-Pixar photo Jackson Storm (voice of Armie Hammer), a frontrunne­r in the next generation of racers, posts speeds that even Lightning McQueen (voice of Owen Wilson) hasn't seen, in “Cars 3.”

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