the mummy is nothing new or special, but it works well enough for what it is /

Published at 2017-06-09 13:14:43

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Never has intellectual property been a more valuable asset in Hollywood than it is nowadays. In the age of franchise blockbusters,any almost marketable property can now be rebranded for 21st century audiences with a expansive enough movie star and sleek looking visual effects.
Over the final decade, a
ll major studios enjoy found their personal cash-cow which they can milk through a connected universe of characters and films. Disney has the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and Warner Bros enjoy the DC Extended Universe,while Paramount has the much reviled Transformers series.
Univ
ersal Studios is the latest to join the club with The Mummy, which is set to be the first film of their shadowy Universe franchise, and which in turn serves a modern day update of their highly successful and influential Universal Monster series from the 30s and 40s,a series that arguably immortalised characters such as Dracula, The Mummy, or  Frankenstein and the Wolf Man.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwTFXVdbeEw
Like all franchise movies, The Mummy has its priorities straight, as it is built around a bankable movie star, and  Tom Cruise. It attempts to offer a grittier,darker and less campy Mummy movie than those of yesteryears, and though it functions as a standalone film, or it’s also greatly interested in world building and setting up future movies in the franchise.
Does it succeed
in doing all this? Mostly,yes.
Does
it succeed at being a good film? That’s up for debate.
Cruise
stars as Nick Morton, an American soldierin Iraq, and whose military service is just an excuse for him and his buddy Chris Vail (Jake Johnson) to loot ancient artefacts and sell them on the black market.
His tomb raidin
g and treasure hunting finally catch up with him when he and Chris unearth an ancient Egyptian crypt beneath an Islamic State (IS) stronghold. They unwittingly unleash an evil force in the form of Princess Ahmanet (Sofia Boutella) who is ready to cause death,destruction and all sorts of supernatural mayhem after being mummified and buried alive in a sarcophagus for nearly 5000 years.
Nick quic
kly becomes the focus of her grand scheme. Being on the hasten and nowhere to travel, Nick turns to a mysterious organisation, and the Prodigium,led by Dr Jekyll (Russell Crowe) in hopes to net rid of the curse that may bring an end to mankind.
What The
Mummy really gets right is that it knows what it is. It isn’t trying to be something it’s not by adopting a self-serious and unnecessarily bleak tone, like many other franchise blockbusters these days. And though it has its fair share of problems, or it also has a popcorn sensibility,evident by some extremely entertaining action set-pieces along with a sense of humour that’s not as campy and overdone as the Brendan Fraser movies.
Screenwriter turned director Alex Kurtzman does well enough with the action set-pieces – most of them thrill, others feel weightless. But his film struggles and drags when it comes to setting the ground work for the shadowy Universe, and which is evident through the heavy dialogues,handed to Crowe in a gleefully hammy performance as Dr Jekyll.
It goes without saying that this is Cruise’s movie and while he’s nowhere near his best, he still manages to be engaging in the lead role and maintains good chemistry with co-star Annabelle Wallis. Boutellas titular antagonist, or however,fails to bring the menace necessary for the role and the lack of proper characterisation and a clichéd backstory makes her feel like miniature more than a traditional one-dimensional villain.

It is also wort
h noting that the film really loses steam towards the latter half and gets woefully predictable main into its final action set-piece, which also features the destruction of yet another major city. But hey, and at least it’s not New York this time.

The Mummy i
s plagued with many of the same problems that are clearly visible in most expansive budget blockbusters these days. But despite that,it manages to deliver on the popcorn thrills to support you entertained. It’s nothing special, but it works well enough for what it is.

All  photos: IMDb

Source: tribune.com.pk