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At The Picture Show
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May 2009
More, more, more! = less
A bigger, more expensive 'Night at the Museum' isn't necessarily better
Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian
20th Century Fox
Director: Shawn Levy
Screenplay: Robert Ben Garant and Thomas Lennon
Starring: Ben Stiller, Amy Adams, Hank Azaria, Robin Williams, Christopher
Guest, Owen Wilson, Steve Coogan and Alain Chabat
Rated PG / 1 hour, 45 minutes
Opened May 22, 2009
(out of four)
In following up their 2006 smash hit, the filmmakers behind the Night at the
Museum franchise adopted a distinct "bigger is better" ethos.
Statues coming to life inside a museum weren't enough anymore. We needed
more character actors. We needed spaceships and tyrants and gangsters. We
needed tiny Albert Einsteins and giant Abraham Lincolns. (Unfortunately, giant
Thomas Jefferson couldn't make it, despite his memorial being just across the way
from Abe's. A pity, really, as I'm sure the two could have had some heated
philosophical discussions on the owning of slaves and what-not. That's
entertainment!)
In fact, with all there is to look at in Night at
the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian - not to mention all the words in the title -
there's hardly any room for an actual movie. Watching it, you get the image of a
board room full of people trying to come up with as many pop historical references
as they can to throw up on the screen. And throw they do. One might even say
they hurl.
After the brainstorming session, of course, came the writing session, and the result
is a succession of gags just (just!) clever enough that the kids will laugh and dumb
enough that the adults will cringe. From time to time, a talented actor (and there
are many in this movie) will overcome that - with pitch-perfect delivery and
timing, perhaps a bit of ad-libbing to improve the script, maybe a funny face or
two. But by and large, this is not a movie at all, but an excuse to spend money on
special effects and fun little costumes.
You know the drill - at sundown, all the statues and monuments come to life. This
time, instead of a mere history museum, it's the entire Smithsonian. The story
revolves around the evil Kahmunrah (Hank Azaria) as he tries to gain control of
the magical Tablet of Ahkmenrah and conquer the world. And it's up to Larry
Daley (Ben Stiller) - now a successful entrepreneur - and all his buddies to thwart
this diabolical scheme.
That's it, by the way. That's the entire plot.
Oh, and Larry kind of falls in love with Amelia Earhart (Amy Adams, the only
actor in this movie who provides the film with any humanity).
Director Shawn Levy and writers Robert Ben Garant and Thomas Lennon all
return from the first go-round and try to think bigger - this time allowing works of
art like V-J Day in Times Square and American Gothic to spring to life as well.
The larger scale of the exercise compared to last time means more noise, more
mess and more visual stimuli, but less coherence and wit.
The thing is, this basic premise could go on forever. Find any place with inanimate
monuments and voila! You've got a movie. Next time, they could scale it back and
do Night at the Mall - with all the display models, cardboard cutouts, hollow
plastic mascots and, of course, department-store mannequins all coming to life
when the doors close. It would be like that movie Mannequin times a thousand.
Then again, that would mean all the naked mannequins in storage would have to
come to life, too, revealing particular body parts . . . or lack thereof, I suppose.
Either way, it would alienate the family audience.
If you do go for the mall idea, guys, I beg you
- please avoid any kind of cross-promotional tie-ins with McDonald's, because I
do not want to see those Ronald McDonald statues at the food court come to life -
or any other clown, for that matter. At that point, I'd be afraid the movie might
just go sour and end with the police unearthing corpses from underneath the Play
Place sandbox.
Anyway, if we're going for bigger and better, the next step has to be Madame
Tussauds, right? I mean, just imagine the possibilities. We'd finally get the
Beatles back together. We could see Muhammad Ali fight Mike Tyson in his
prime. Or, even better, have Keaton fight Chaplin. (Keaton TKO, round two.) Or,
better yet, they could all band together and punch out Ryan Seacrest.
We could get a couple more glorious hours of Arnold Schwarzenegger's prime,
have Karl Marx and Don King get together to discuss personal grooming and even
have Engelbert Humperdinck around for comic relief. And I'm sure we could find
something for Marilyn Monroe to do.
See? After all this time, wax museums would finally have a purpose. I don't know
where there's a plot in all that, but I'm sure we could figure something out.
After that, how about setting the next sequel at
one of those nuclear testing sites? Can you imagine those dummies coming to life?
Would they be able to talk? Would they instinctively understand their singular
purpose on this earth and just commit suicide en masse?
Is any of this sounding good, 20th Century Fox? Also, is there a statue of the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man anywhere? Because that would just be awesome, if only
for nostalgia's sake. Maybe he could eat Ben Stiller at the end - an ironic gesture,
since everyone knows Ben Stiller loves marshmallows.
(OK, I made that up.)
On that note, is there a God statue anywhere? Because that might answer a few
questions. Or raise more, I suppose. Oh, the places you'll go, Larry Daley. The
places you'll go!
Read more by Chris Bellamy