Chicago Sun-Times

John Boyega battles beasts in ‘ Pacific Rim Uprising’

Clunky sequel about robots battling monsters lacks the original’s entertainm­ent value

- RICHARD ROEPER

Note to future Movie Pilots with a Rebellious Streak: You don’t have to keep talking about how you have a chance to save the world when you have a chance to save the world. We know. We see the big scary things threatenin­g to destroy life as we know it.

Note to future Movie Support Team Players Back at Mission Control:

It doesn’t help for you to yell things like, “You’ve got to get out of there now!” when the Movie Pilots with Rebellious Streaks are rac- ing against time. They know they have to get out of there, now. All that badgering doesn’t help.

Whenever “Pacific Rim Uprising” gives itself the chance to do something fresh or unique or original, it passes up that opportunit­y to embrace the cliché. The sequel to the outlandish­ly entertaini­ng 2013 sci- fi monster movie hit that was directed by Guillermo del Toro ( this one is helmed by Steven S. DeKnight) is a clunky, loud, tedious and uninvolvin­g paint- by- the- CGInumbers actioner, filled with all- too- familiar archetypes saddled by a story so thin it’s almost translucen­t.

“Uprising” picks up some 10 years after the great war between the humans and the Kaiju, a pack of Godzilla- sized sea monsters that burst through a space- time portal on the bottom of the Pacific Ocean and threatened to destroy the planet. The humans created gigantic rock-’ em sock-’ em robots called Jaegers, which were piloted by two- person teams who joined minds via a process known as “drifting,” and they took down those dreaded Kaiju. Yeah!

A decade later, peace is the rule of the day and most of the cities destroyed in battle have been rebuilt — with the exception of a few metropolit­an areas that remain in disrepair, with the skeletal remains of a few Kaiju still lying around like futuristic- looking Stonehenge monuments.

John Boyega ( “Star Wars”) is Jake, son of the late great Gen. Stacker Pentecost ( Idris Elba), fallen hero of the great war. Bounding about with a giant chip on his shoulder because Pops died before he ever had a chance to impress him, Jake is wasting his life partying and stealing things — which lands him in jail and facing a prison term.

Jake’s sister Make Mori ( Rinko Kikuchi), a highrankin­g military official, intervenes and gives Jake the option of avoiding incarcerat­ion if he agrees to return to the Pan Pacific Defense Corps ( that’s the PPDC to you and me), where he once washed out due to a serious attitude problem.

This is Jake’s shot at redemption! What are the

odds someone at some point will say, “Your father would have been proud of you, Jake”?

Cailee Spaeny is the plucky street kid Amara, a genius hacker who built her own mini- Jaeger from leftover parts. She joins the PPDC as a cadet recruit. Scott Eastwood is the handsome, by- thebook pilot Lambert, who’s basically Ice Man to Jake’s Maverick. Charlie Day is back as Newt Geiszler, the brainy and wisecracki­ng nerd who is now working for a powerful and hmmmm just maybe dangerous mega- conglomera­te that wants to replace human- piloted Jaegers with drones.

( Sidebar: How is possible none of these pilots ever refers to himself as a “Jaegermeis­ter”? Come on! It’s right there waiting to be invoked.)

“Pacific Rim Uprising” spins its wheels for long stretches, as we see the cadets training, and we learn the tragic ( and utterly unsurprisi­ng) details of Amara’s past, and Jake banters with Lambert, and Charlie Day does his Charlie Day thing, which is to repeat unfunny one- liners twice and at a high volume in a strained and unsuccessf­ul attempt to provide comedic relief.

Eventually we get a little plot wrinkle that leads to round two of the humans and their Jaegers vs. the seemingly unstoppabl­e Kaiju.

The Jaegers’ movements, you’ll recall, are facilitate­d by the little human pilots strapped into a cockpit in the “head” of the Jaeger. When the pilots run, the Jaeger runs. When the pilots punch, the Jaeger punches. It’s like the coolest game ever at Dave & Buster’s, but these talented and likable actors can’t help but look ridiculous as they mindmeld with one another and run and jump and make kicking and stabbing and punching moves from inside the giant robot guys.

The climactic battle drags on forever and looks like a high- tech update of a monster movie clash of the titans from a half- century ago. Even the sight of the residents of Tokyo scrambling for their lives as a giant lizard monster stomps through the city serves only as a reminder we’re sitting through a glorified B- movie with nothing new to say.

 ??  ?? The robots known as Jaegers return to action battling sea monsters in “Pacific Rim Uprising.” UNIVERSAL PICTURES PHOTOS
The robots known as Jaegers return to action battling sea monsters in “Pacific Rim Uprising.” UNIVERSAL PICTURES PHOTOS
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 ??  ?? In “Pacific Rim Uprising,” pilots Jake ( John Boyega, left) and Lambert ( Scott Eastwood) banter like Maverick and Ice Man.
In “Pacific Rim Uprising,” pilots Jake ( John Boyega, left) and Lambert ( Scott Eastwood) banter like Maverick and Ice Man.

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