Empire (UK)

TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: MUTANT MAYHEM

TURTLE POWER REMAINS UNDIMINISH­ED

- JOHN NUGENT

★★★★

OUT NOW / CERT PG / 83 MINS

DIRECTOR Jeff Rowe

CAST Micah Abbey, Shamon Brown Jr., Nicolas Cantu, Brady Noon, John Cena, Jackie Chan, Ice Cube, Ayo Edebiri, Paul Rudd

PLOT Desperate to be accepted by humans, four mutant turtles set out to become heroes by defeating the evil villain Superfly (Ice Cube).

THE NINJA TURTLES are back — and frankly, it’s like they’ve never left. In the last decade alone, the pizza-loving heroes-in-half-shells have enjoyed two live-action films, two animated series, toy lines, comic books, theme-park rides — even a straight-to-dvd movie in which the turtles team up with Batman for some reason. Do we really need more? It’s a testament to Mutant Mayhem, the seventh feature-length turtle outing, that it feels as fresh as it does.

For one, it’s very lovely to look at. Sony Pictures Animation (which has remarkably establishe­d itself as the most exciting name in Western animation, from Into The Spider-verse onwards) continues its run of innovation here, with director Jeff Rowe (co-director on the brilliant Mitchells Vs The Machines) leaning even heavier into that scruffy, hand-drawn aesthetic, the scribbled lines heartily embracing teenage-scrapbook imperfecti­on.

It’s that adolescent experience that keeps this latest entry feeling more alive and engaging than it has any right to. Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, co-writers of the script and avowed fans of this franchise, are no strangers to teenage coming-of-age stories, and as well as sprinkling some of their witty, self-aware comedy into the mix — there are knowing nods to the strangenes­s of the turtles’ origin story — this adolescent outsider tale feels of a piece with Superbad or Blockers.

Casting actual youngsters as the voices of the four heroes is an inspired move, too; the four largely unknown actors given ample room to goof around with the script, talk over each other, squabble and enjoy an easy level of banter. There is splendid voice work across the board, in fact, including a very funny turn from Ice Cube as the villainous Superfly, in a role seemingly written for him; plus Paul Rudd as a scene-stealing stoner mutant gecko named Mondo.

Perhaps best of all is Jackie Chan as Master Splinter, who transcends the slight sense of stunt-casting with a genuinely warm and funny twist on the mentor character: the kung-fu master mutant rat, respun as a kind of firstgener­ation immigrant dad, his turtle sons the second-gen kids better at acclimatis­ing to a hostile environmen­t.

It doesn’t quite hit the narrative ambition of this summer’s Spider-verse movie, and the last act moves so speedily and messily that the fights can sometimes veer on incoherent. But these are forgivable quibbles. A well-worn lunchbox franchise has made one of the more lovable family films you’re likely to see this year. Pass the pizza.

VERDICT

Inventivel­y animated, giddily funny, and a surprising­ly authentic take on the outsider experience: it is virtually impossible not to be charmed by these reptilian bros.

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 ?? ?? Clockwise from left: Pizza party: the Turtles hang out with human ally April O’neil (Ayo Edebiri); Mutant villains Bebop and Rocksteady.
Clockwise from left: Pizza party: the Turtles hang out with human ally April O’neil (Ayo Edebiri); Mutant villains Bebop and Rocksteady.

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