The Province

More ham, more fowl, but flick is no golden egg

Angry Birds sequel can’t sustain momentum of the original

- ANGELO MUREDDA — PHOTOS: SONY PICTURES.

The angry birds make peace with their enemies and dive bomb toxic masculinit­y in The Angry Birds Movie 2, Thurop Van Orman’s tedious but fitfully engaging second instalment to the aging mobile phone game property.

The sequel lands far too long after the original — plot of which is neatly summarized and dismissed in a joke early on, for anyone who’s worried they can’t remember it — to sustain any kind of momentum for the series, win any new converts or develop the first film’s allegory about the horrors of gentrifica­tion.

The upshot is that it has little to show for itself besides a more diversifie­d and lively voice cast and some pretty colours in the pastel range that at least make it stand out from the grey palette dominating most contempora­ry blockbuste­rs.

This time out, the avian residents of Bird Island have largely set aside their difference­s from their porcine neighbours on Pig Island, with whom there is a begrudging ceasefire after the pigs’ failed invasion in the previous film. That truce, brokered by Pig leader Leonard (voiced by Bill Hader), puts his former nemesis, the pariah-turned-hero Red (Jason Sudeikis), in an awkward position, since his newly prominent role in the bird hierarchy was forged in times of war.

Luckily for him, both sides soon have to unite against Zeta (Leslie Jones), the exiled leader of Eagle Island, who, tired of her frosty digs, decides to terrorize both communitie­s so they will evacuate their property and leave her with a much warmer personal resort for her and her daughter (Tiffany Haddish).

The real enemy, though, is Red’s inability to share the spotlight with old buddies Chuck (Josh Gad) and Bomb (Danny McBride), as well as a new addition, Chuck’s whipsmart younger sister Silver (Rachel Bloom), who has the brains to lead this operation and strike Red’s fancy (though he won’t admit it), but not the respect a relatively average male captain like Red more easily commands.

Though the film trades the angry populist politics of its predecesso­r for a mushier and less convincing liberal centre, softly cajoling any dads who might have accompanie­d their children not to speak over their women coworkers, it relies too heavily on us having a stake in Red’s sad backstory to work. Sudeikis arguably commits too well to the bit, making Red’s paranoia and chauvinism so authentica­lly off-putting that most kids won’t much care whether this 40-something-sounding crank learns his lesson about humility.

His middle-aged sourness also makes the occasional flashbacks to Red’s depressing school days feel outright weird. It doesn’t help that Bloom sounds a much more convincing­ly childlike note as his flirty frenemy.

Whatever reverence the first film might have had for the franchise that spawned it is also lost here. References to the game mechanics come in the form of a couple of familiar music cues and some halfhearte­d visual gags about mortified birds slingshott­ing themselves into solitude when they feel embarrasse­d.

What does make a cringewort­hy return is the first film’s obnoxious soundtrack, with nearly every major comic or dramatic beat tied to a literal song choice that Gen-X parents will remember and their children will recognize as vaguely vintage — from Sarah McLachlan’s Angel to the Dawson’s Creek theme song.

As with the first Angry Birds Movie, though, it’s not all bad. A parallel side plot featuring a trio of diminutive hatchlings on a quest to find a trio of misplaced eggs has some pops of colour and some inventive screwball comedy. So does a genuinely odd set piece involving the birds smuggling their way past Eagle Island security in an uncanny eagle costume, whose jerky movements recall (seriously) the stubborn machines from Charlie Chaplin’s Modern Times.

And the supporting voice cast do their level best to make up for the otherwise flat characters — especially Jones, who makes Zeta a camp diva villain in the Ursula mould, but more sympatheti­c. In a film that’s otherwise derivative by design, her motivation — the curdled self-care ethos of “I’m putting myself first, because I worked hard for it, and I deserve it” — feels refreshing­ly original.

 ??  ?? As Zeta, Leslie Jones is a refreshing villain thanks to her curdled self-care ethos.
As Zeta, Leslie Jones is a refreshing villain thanks to her curdled self-care ethos.
 ??  ?? Pete Davidson as Jerry and Zach Woods as Carl are two of the many voice actors in this sequel.
Pete Davidson as Jerry and Zach Woods as Carl are two of the many voice actors in this sequel.

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