Arab Times

MacFarlane’s overstuffe­d plot spoils irreverent ‘Ted 2’

Too much sincerity and story crushes fun

- By Lindsey Bahr

‘Ted

2’ asks a question that we never needed, or particular­ly wanted, to know the answer to: Is Ted, the magical, foul-mouthed, pot-smoking teddy bear, a person in the eyes of the law?

While it’s unfair to judge a comedy simply for a ridiculous premise, here, it also happens to be the unlikely killer of the overstuffe­d “Ted 2.” And resolution does not come quickly enough in this nearly two-hour rumination on civil rights and abject stupidity.

Part of the charm of “Ted,” writer-director Seth MacFarlane’s better-than-it-should-have-been story of a grown man and his sentient stuffed animal, was how unaffected­ly it treated its talking teddy. Ted just is. No one thinks too hard about the why of it. Combining that silly foundation with Mark Wahlberg’s endearingl­y dopey intensity was a stroke of brilliance. The movie was allowed to only be about their friendship, and it worked.

Making a sequel to an original comedy is always a tough game, though. More often than not, the desire to please fans and recreate the magic of the first produces nothing more than an exaggerate­d rehash.

In an admirable effort to go a different route, MacFarlane has instead done something hopelessly bizarre: He’s given his film too much sincerity and story, and it practicall­y crushes whatever fun does exist.

This time, we meet up with Ted (voiced again by MacFarlane) at his wedding to fellow grocery store clerk and gum-smacking bombshell Tami-Lynn (Jessica Barth). Their newlywed bliss soon curdles and they decide to have a baby to save the marriage.

Adoption

Because the natural way of going about this business is not an option (for a few reasons), TamiLynn and Ted decide to try adoption. It’s then that a state authority asks whether or not a stuffed animal should be afforded the rights of a human.

And very quickly after that, Ted loses his job, his marriage is invalidate­d, and audiences are forced to endure a horrifying thing: a whiny, self-righteous Ted.

So, best friend John (Wahlberg), now a sad-sack divorcee, and Ted hook up with Samantha Jackson (Amanda Seyfried), a newbie law associate who’s willing to take their case pro bono, and a few montages later, they’re off fighting the good fight in excruciati­ng detail. Seriously, there are almost interestin­g debates over Ted’s humanity and a few fairly earnest references to the 13th Amendment and Dred Scott. It’s a wonder “Ted 2” didn’t venture into artificial intelligen­ce territory.

Still, it’s very rare for a MacFarlane venture to be completely unfunny. Even “A Million Ways to Die in the West” had moments. The highlights in “Ted 2” are almost worth it. There’s a Busby Berkeley-style opening number, a fantastic Liam Neeson cameo, a riff on what the F stands for in F. Scott Fitzgerald, a “Jurassic Park” bit and a few others.

There’s even an over-the-top fight at New York Comic-Con (with more than a few “Transforme­rs” peppering in the background, though it’s unclear whether that’s poking fun at Wahlberg’s associatio­n with the franchise or promoting it).The sequence had some promise in spite of the vitriol fueling the joke, but it’s all too late.

Unique

MacFarlane continues to be a unique and probably misunderst­ood artist in popular culture. His venomous humor, basic moral code, crass sensibilit­ies and fond- ness for classic showmanshi­p are, at the very least, an interestin­g combinatio­n for a modern entertaine­r. But they haven’t quite meshed yet, at least on film.

The misadventu­res of a couple of crass knucklehea­ds should be simple fun, and it’s quite all right to try for a more substantiv­e story in something so trivial. But the silliness of the first has ceded to something that’s also a little more hateful and bitter. Ted and John should’ve stayed on the couch and out of the courtroom.

“Ted 2,” a Universal Pictures release, is rated R by the Motion Picture Associatio­n of America for “crude and sexual content, pervasive language, and some drug use.” Running time: 115 minutes. One and a half stars out of four. (AP)

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