Empire (UK)

INCREDIBLE­S 2

- VERDICT JOHN NUGENT

Is Elastigirl one of the summer’s best big-screen superheroe­s? It’s not a stretch to say she’s up there.

DIRECTOR Brad Bird

CAST Craig T. Nelson, Holly Hunter, Samuel L. Jackson, Sarah Vowell, Huck Milner, Sophia Bush, Catherine Keener, Bob Odenkirk

PLOT The Incredible­s are back out in the open, and with support from wealthy siblings Evelyn (Keener) and Winston Deavor (Odenkirk), hope to restore their legal status as superheroe­s. But can they stop the evil, hypnotisin­g villain Screenslav­er — and raise three superkids in the process? FOURTEEN YEARS HAVE passed since we last saw the Incredible­s, the Pixar superhero family to rival the likes of the Richards or the Els — but as far as returning writer/director Brad Bird is concerned, no time has passed at all. The first movie’s epilogue now forming the second movie’s prologue, the Underminer (voiced by Pixar good luck charm John Ratzenberg­er) is still wreaking havoc on Metroville, and the Incredible­s are still doing everything within their superpower­s to stop him. This instant continuati­on is, in a way, a deft way to avoid acknowledg­ing cinema’s recent superhero boom — there is no wink or nod here to the lucrative cinematic universes that have sprouted up in the interim. In the Incredible­s’ universe, of course, the golden age of superheroe­s has been and gone.

In some respects, you almost wish things had moved on a little further. After that blinding opening, Incredible­s 2 initially feels over-cautiously tied to the beats of the first film: supers are still illegal, and our heroes are still relying on mysterious benevolent billionair­es to keep them employed. But there are key difference­s: here, the wealthy benefactor­s are brother-and-sister Evelyn and Winston Deavor, who each have their own reasons for helping the family overcome the status of secondclas­s citizen. The Deavors propose a bit of PR spin, providing resources, lobbyists and plenty of insurance to rehabilita­te their public image, with Elastigirl, whose stretchy powers make her the least destructiv­e of the old guard, as the figurehead.

So begins a new mission — but, as the rooftop barbecues of The Fast And The Furious have taught us, it all comes down to family. Juggling crime-fighting duties with domestic obligation­s is an opportunit­y for neat jokes (Helen laments missing out on baby Jack-jack’s first power, as she would his first word), but also the complex dynamics of a nuclear family that’s always seconds away from a new crisis. With Helen as the new breadwinne­r, Bob is left to be a “substitute parent”, and he has his giant hands full with a moody teenage girl, a frantic pre-teen boy, and a wildly unpredicta­ble baby.

Jack-jack’s hilariousl­y uncharted polymorpho­us powers steal more than one scene, but the film finds time for quieter moments, as when the parents worry about taking a new job in-between mouthfuls of toothpaste, in scenes that families everywhere will keenly recognise. Marrying the miraculous with the mundane has been the real achievemen­t of Pixar in general and these characters in particular, and it’s a distinct highlight here.

If there’s a gripe to be had, it’s that perennial superhero movie ailment: the underwhelm­ing villain. Unlike the first movie, which boasted the disgruntle­d former fan Syndrome (a brilliantl­y well-rounded foe), this has the elusive Screenslav­er, a baddie whose motivation­s are foggy, whose introducti­on arrives fairly late in the film, and whose true identity is telegraphe­d so heavily that even nippers will see it coming.

But it all moves at such joyous speed and energy that you may not care. Bird’s gift for wildly kinetic, ingenious action remain undimmed, and even the wackier moments — a mother-of-three being used as a human trampoline, for example — offer the weight of wit and meaning behind them.

Kudos must go to Michael Giacchino’s score, which elevates the film immensely with more John Barry-esque ’60s big band swagger. (Be sure to stay for the end credits to hear the hero’s original theme tunes. Frozone’s, naturally, is ice-cool.) The Incredible­s are back — it’s like they never left.

There are some quibbles to be had in an over-familiar set-up, and an under-served villain, but overall this is a gloriously fun family parable, and as entertaini­ng as any superhero movie you’ll see this year.

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from above: Stretch appeal: Helen Parr/elastigirl (Holly Hunter) is going the distance; Bread-winner Elastigirl leaves husband Bob (Craig T. Nelson) to look after new baby Jack-jack (Eli Fucile); Breakfast club: Dad Bob, baby Jack-jack,...
Clockwise from above: Stretch appeal: Helen Parr/elastigirl (Holly Hunter) is going the distance; Bread-winner Elastigirl leaves husband Bob (Craig T. Nelson) to look after new baby Jack-jack (Eli Fucile); Breakfast club: Dad Bob, baby Jack-jack,...
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