Los Angeles Times

Not enough Tom, Jerry

Gleefully animated cat-and-mouse games take a back seat to the so-so live-action play.

- By Tracy Brown

If there is one thing that can be said about “Tom & Jerry,” it’s that the beloved cat and mouse spend most of their time in the movie doing what they do best: playing a hyper-destructiv­e game of cat-and-mouse. But that really isn’t enough to justify taking this nostalgia bait.

To be fair, having non-verbal characters best known for animated shorts carry a 101-minute movie is a difficult ask. Instead, Warner Bros. Pictures’ live-action/animation hybrid, out now in theaters and HBO Max, sees William Hanna and Joseph Barbera’s classic cartoon rivals plopped into modernday New York for an adventure that mostly revolves around humans played by Chloë Grace Moretz, Michael Peña, Rob Delaney, Colin Jost and Pallavi Sharda.

Directed by Tim Story from a script by Kevin Costello, “Tom & Jerry” is set in a version of the world where all animals — from pets to potential ingredient­s to exhibits in a museum — are cartoons. That they are portrayed in a more classical 2-D animated look instead of the 3DCG approach taken by other recent live-action/animation hybrids does add to its charm. The movie starts with Tom and Jerry trying to make new starts in the city. The pair quickly cross paths in a park when Jerry tries to crash Tom’s attempt at making some quick cash as a street performer, establishi­ng their antagonist­ic relationsh­ip. Their ensuing high jinks also lead to innocent bystander Kayla (Moretz) losing her job, setting up the main human story line.

The majority of the subsequent action is set within a swanky hotel where Kayla fibs her way into a job she is not quite qualified for as the hotel staffs up in anticipati­on of the wedding of social media “it” couple Preeta (Sharda) and Ben (Jost). Though Kayla charms the manager (Delaney) to get the position, the event manager Terence (Peña) dislikes her from the start.

The human story line just doesn’t deliver. It’s hard to figure out what character you are meant to root for because the movie doesn’t give the audience enough to really understand their motivation­s. It’s a credit to the actors that they are not all completely unlikable.

Tom and Jerry, each interested in making the fancy hotel their home, unfortunat­ely become secondary to Kayla’s quest to prove she can handle the job. The slapstick physical comedy does provide some laughs and, coupled with the toilet humor, “Tom & Jerry” will likely appeal to some of the audience.

Still, if you’re in a mood for this flavor of cartoon violence, you’re better off hunting down the classic shorts or episodes of Tom and Jerry’s past TV shows.

 ?? Warner Bros. Pictures ?? HYBRID movie “Tom & Jerry” reunites pair.
Warner Bros. Pictures HYBRID movie “Tom & Jerry” reunites pair.

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