Times Colonist

Four Horsemen can still cast a spell

- REVIEW JAKE COYLE

Now You See Me 2 Where: Cineplex Odeon Victoria, Cineplex Odeon Westshore, Landmark Cinemas University Heights, SilverCity Starring: Jesse Eisenberg, Mark Ruffalo, Woody Harrelson Directed by: Jon M. Chu Parental advisory: 14A Rating: Two stars out of four

The magician heist movie Now You See Me 2 disappears with not a poof, but in a hyper-kinetic blur of hectic plot mechanics, ceaselessl­y nattering characters and so many ploys of misdirecti­on that the film’s own direction got lost up someone’s sleeve long ago. Now you see it, now you don’t. Did you care that you saw it? Why did you see it, anyway? Is that why you look like you need a nap?

Yet the cast is one reason to catch Jon M. Chu’s sequel to the surprise 2013 hit. It’s an odd assortment but a talented one that includes Woody Harrelson, Mark Ruffalo, Morgan Freeman and Michael Caine. They don’t get the chance to sink their teeth into anything much but in the summertime, you usually need to buy a ticket to a superhero movie for such an ensemble.

And there’s something almost quaint about the two Now You See Me films. They are diverting and harmless and the fate of the world, pleasantly, does not hang in the balance. They’re perfect for fans of Ocean’s Eleven who are looking for weaker filmmaking, a little less star power and a whole lot more playing cards.

In Now You See Me 2, the Four Horsemen, having gone into hiding following their Las Vegas exploits of the first film, return.

They’re a group of magicians led — curiously, given the alternativ­es — by Jesse Eisenberg’s slight-of-hand artist. The others are Harrelson’s hypnotist, Dave Franco’s street magician and a new addition played by Lizzy Caplan (replacing Isla Fisher) whose sarcastic flare steals the movie.

The Horsemen are like a fantasy dreamed by David Copperfiel­d, a co-producer whose show inspired the films. When not trying to one-up each other’s tricks, the Horsemen perform feats of illusion that unmask real corruption.

In the world of Now You See Me, they are extravagan­tly (and bizarrely) famous, cheered by mobs on the streets and pursued in vain by the feds (Ruffalo plays the lead agent).

In Now You See Me 2, their flashy return is spoiled by a wealthy tech whiz in hiding (Daniel Radcliffe), who constructs an elaborate revenge against the magicians that transports them around the globe to Macau, presumably for the purpose of drawing in Chinese moviegoers.

The movie, scripted by Ed Solomon, is such a constant barrage of absurdly implausibl­e tricks, followed by explanatio­ns of how they were done, that Now You See Me 2 feels like the work of a feverish, manic magician who can’t stop pulling rabbits out of hats.

Chu, a veteran of multiple Justin Bieber documentar­ies and several Step Up films, cracks up the pace and never holds a shot much longer than a second. And when everything is a manipulati­on — one illusion after another — nothing comes as a surprise.

It feels like a lost opportunit­y because both Now You See Me films have a pleasant enough prepostero­usness. It’s hard to dislike a movie that adds a curlyhaire­d evil twin brother for Woody Harrelson.

But magic always feels a little redundant in the movies. By itself, cinema is a grand magic act that never gives away its tricks (well, except for director commentari­es on DVDs).

Maybe that’s why Now You See Me 2 can’t slow down. It knows it’s always being upstaged by the hocus pocus of its own medium.

 ??  ?? Dave Franco, Lizzy Caplan, Jesse Eisenberg and Woody Harrelson in Now You See Me 2.
Dave Franco, Lizzy Caplan, Jesse Eisenberg and Woody Harrelson in Now You See Me 2.

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