Pacific Rim: Uprising
Steven DeKnight’s Pacific Rim: Uprising is a promising
sequel with amazing special effects that fell flat on its face like a punch
from a Rock’em Sock’em robot with bad actor chemistry and a non-existent
storyline.
Uprising takes place ten years after
Staker Pentecost (Iris Elba) sacrificed himself to close the breach and end the
envision by the Precursors. His son,
Jake (John Boyega) who was once a member of the Pan Pacific Defense Corps
(PPDC), is now living the high life as a scavenger in what used to be Puerto
Rico and could care less what is going on in the world. Jake is particularly good at getting things
that other scavengers can’t. Especially, parts of decommissioned Jaegers for
those who want to build their own bootlegged version. While scavenging parts in a nearby jaeger
graveyard, Jake crosses paths with Amara (Cailee Spaeny), a spunky, mouthy and
intelligent young girl who is also there to get parts to finish building her own
Jaeger.
The two are forced
into a situation that puts them up against the PPDC for operating an
unauthorized Jaeger and are arrested for it. Jake, who has been on the wrong
side of the PPDC for a while, is given an ultimatum by his sister, Mako Mori
(Rinko Kikuchi): rejoin the PPDC and train recruits to pilot Jaegers or
jail. Reluctantly, Jake returns to the
PPDC to train the new recruits and to her surprise, Amara is now a new
recruit. From here the story goes down a
very predictable road. Jake is reunited with his old handshake partner, Nate
Lambert (Scott Eastwood) and Amara, being the new kid on the block from the
wrong side of the tracks, is met with some resentment and downright disrespect
by fellow Cadet Viktoria (Ivanna Sakhno). *coughs Ender’s Game*
While everyone is
getting reacquainted and despised, Shao Industries, led by Liewn Shao (Tuan
Jing) has proposed the end of all piloted Jaegers with their drone program. The
program's technology is spearheaded by Newt (Charlie Day) who has become the
top scientist in charge of bringing the Shao dream and her drones to
fruition. Enter the twists and turns
that will have you on the edge of your seat. Wait, I’m just kidding.
The acting was
terrible. There isn’t any human depth that would make you care about any of the
characters. Granted, it was a pleasure to see Boyega doing something other than
trying to find Rae and running away from the First Order. He actually had somewhat of a bad boy persona
in this film which was refreshing.
Spaeny, in her first major role, did a good job at being that spunky kid
from the slums who everyone thinks shouldn’t be in the PPDC. The real question
this writer has, is how in the world does Scott Eastwood keep getting acting
roles? Wait, don’t tell me, I know the answer to that. Yes, his acting has gotten better, but damn!
He comes off as outsider kid who is trying to make friends with the other kids
on the playground but fails. It was kind
of painful to watch.
The action (when
it finally got going) was good and the special effects were amazing. The one good thing about Uprising is that it
is not as dark visually as the first. The fight scenes were well lit and you
could actually see the entire Kaiju instead of just portions.
My previous review
of Del Toro’s Pacific Rim was less
than glorious. I compared it to a live action Gundam Warriors with Vulcan mind
meld and Godzilla type monsters with a lot of dark backdrops. The first film
was no big box office hit, but at least there was a storyline and plot that
flowed well. The acting was somewhat believable and did not look forced. The
scenes between Hunnam and Elba were believable.
However, DeKnight’s Uprising is NOTHING like its predecessor.
Deknight's version a campier
hodgepodge of various movies intertwined into one. There are points in the
movie where I thought I was watching Ender’s
Game with brief moments of the Matrix
and the Power Rangers. Hell, I
thought Voltron would make an
appearance but alas that didn’t happen.
Overall, if you go
see this movie, you will be reclaiming your time. You have been warned.
Grade
D-
Comments
Post a Comment