Houston Chronicle

Long-awaited ‘Incredible­s 2’ is pop-culture eye candy.

- By Michael O’Sullivan

Fourteen long years have passed since the animated superhero comedy “The Incredible­s” burst, like Superman, into theaters. But when fans of the hit Pixar film sit down to the new sequel — about a family of suburban crime-fighters who must hide their XMen-like abilities from a world that has outlawed “supers” — 2004 may feel like only yesterday.

The delightful­ly restorativ­e “Incredible­s 2” picks up precisely where the first film — which ended with a tantalizin­g cliffhange­r — left off, with the arrival of a new villain, the Underminer, who arose from the earth in a giant tunnel-boring machine.

The first film ended with a knowing glance — between the costumed crusader Mr. Incredible (voice of Craig T. Nelson), his wife, Elastigirl (Holly Hunter), and their three kids — as well as a question: Would they continue to fight against those who would undermine truth, justice and the American way, or would they, in their own way, go back undergroun­d?

“Incredible­s 2” immediatel­y sets about answering that question, in a way that will surprise no one, except to the degree that it incorporat­es currents in contempora­ry American culture — both in movies and in the news — that have developed in the intervenin­g years.

When Mr. Incredible, a.k.a. Bob Parr, shouts that he’ll try to keep the Underminer’s vehicle “away from the buildings,” it’s hard not think of the casual destructio­n that is countenanc­ed by so many of today’s actionmovi­e franchises, for which collateral damage seems almost to have become a smirking, inside joke. And when a team of brother-and-sister PR strategist­s (Bob Odenkirk and Catherine Keener) show up to offer help rehabilita­ting the lawless image of superheroe­s, they outfit Elastigirl with a police-style body camera, the better to document the true nature of her good works.

Such au courant elements, coupled with the introducti­on of the film’s true villain — a mysterious entity called the Screenslav­er, who turns his victims into mindless automatons, via the mesmerizin­g power of computer screens —- lend “Incredible­s 2” just a whiff of topicality. The franchise always has been characteri­zed by a kind of timelessne­ss, underscore­d by a retro-futuristic production design that references, all at once, midcentury modernism, the gadget-rich future and the present. High-tech suits and Batmanesqu­e accessorie­s blend fluidly with antique-looking television sets that broadcast the mid-1960s cartoon adventure “Jonny Quest.”

Somehow these various influences all work, propelled by Michael Giacchino’s “James Bond”-ian score, in returning writer-director Brad Bird’s witty, engrossing and visually stunning adventure. There are several flawlessly rendered action set pieces, including one in which Elastigirl — straddling an electric motorcycle that pops apart into two pieces, held together only by her rubbery torso — races to save a runaway monorail train. But none is more arresting than the hand-to-hand combat between the heroine and Screenslav­er in his darkened lair, which appears to be lit by a garish strobe light.

Speaking of fights, much of the film’s comedy comes courtesy of Bob and Helen’s youngest child, the toddler JackJack, who in this installmen­t reveals himself to possess several new powers, all of which come to the fore in a scene in which he does hilarious battle with a backyard raccoon. Meanwhile, the family’s other children, Violet (Sarah Vowell) and Dash (Huck Milner, replacing Spencer Fox), spend their time contending with adversarie­s of their own: teenage boys and math, respective­ly.

Perhaps most intriguing­ly, “Incredible­s 2” is both pop-culture eye candy and a sly critique of it — albeit one delivered in the form of the bad guy, who rails against the mediation of screens as a poor substitute for unfiltered life experience. I don’t need to tell you who wins here, but it’s refreshing to see a movie sequel that can question its own existence, even as it revels in it. (A movie theater marquee advertises “Dementia 113” in the background of one shot, a sight gag that evokes the kind of throwaway joke you might see on “The Simpsons,” for which Bird once worked.)

It’s been a long time coming for “Incredible­s 2,” but the punchline is worth the setup.

 ?? Disney-Pixar ?? To help rehabilita­te the image of superheroe­s, Elastigirl (voiced by Holly Hunter) wears a bodycam in “The Incredible­s 2.”
Disney-Pixar To help rehabilita­te the image of superheroe­s, Elastigirl (voiced by Holly Hunter) wears a bodycam in “The Incredible­s 2.”

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