Friday, May 4, 2012

[Freya-dæg] Johnny English Reborn Improved

{An example of Atkinson's Mr. Bean-esque mugging in Johnny English Reborn. Image from Pfangirl Through The Looking Glass.}





Introduction
Plot Summary
The Good
The Bad
Judgment
Closing





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Introduction

Johnny English Reborn is one of those movies that you hope is better than it's predecessor (especially given the 8 year span between them) and that gives you a performance like a trained monkey at a piano recital. The judgment on this one's going to be all hush hush until the very last minute.

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Plot Summary

The movie's plot follows from the ending of the first.

Johnny English (Rowan Atkinson) has since become a real MI7 agent, but has lost his knighthood because of his failure on a major mission in Mozambique. However, because he gets the call from Pegasus (played by Gillian Anderson) to come out of suspension, he returns to the agency and takes on a mission involving the mysterious group "Vortex." Some slapstick gags, antics, and a Behavioral Psychologist love interest (Kate Sumner, played by Rosamund Pike) later, Johnny's the only one who can foil Vortex's plan to assassinate the Premier of China while he's meeting with the UK's Prime Minister in a high security Swedish fortress.

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The Good

Showing some of the true colors of a worthy sequel, the main character in this flick has changed. Johnny English is no longer the bumbling new agent who has no clue whatsoever, now he's the bumbling experienced agent who has every clue necessary but still has his penchant for mixing things up fully running the show.

This character growth might sound like a minor improvement, but the growth helps to deflect a lot of the predictable jokes that may otherwise have come up, and it allows Atkinson to deliver many of the comedic moments in a style that's similar to the one he use for Mr. Bean.

Particularly in the section of the movie where he's fleeing capture on a souped-up motorized wheelchair. The section takes many of the conventions of a regular chase (the interruption, the surprise appearance) and uses them to comedic effect. Dave White of movies.com described the film as "a reasonably steady stream of closed-mouth chuckles over comic incidents," but the wheelchair scene turned those chuckles into guffaws.

Speaking of other reviewers - another major criticism of the movie, lobbed by Lou Lumenick of the New York Post, is that the movie puts way too much emphasis on jokes that appeal to "...children who laugh at the sight of men being repeatedly kicked in the groin."

Maybe watching the Love Guru can forever change your perspective on cheap gags, but Johnny English Reborn really doesn't use crotch-hit gags that often. In fact, the writer seems to be wary enough of them to veer left of a few potential instances of the gag throughout the film.

However predictable the movie may be in some ways, it mostly failed the major predictability test: whether or not Johnny cross dresses at any point in the film ala Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows.

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The Bad

Overall, Johnny English Reborn's major problem is with its supporting cast of characters. Many of them are acceptable because they have such small roles, but Kate, the love interest, and Agent One are two dimensional at best.

In fact, the entire romance sub-plot of the movie appears to have been added in a quick and dirty kind of way. It's obvious that Kate's interest in Johnny starts off as clinical (as she herself points out) but we never really see it become emotional, it's as if the integral we're-a-couple-now scene is missing from the movie.

Agent One, aka Simon Ambrose, (Dominic West) is similarly thin in character, being simply the ideal agent who's more than he seems.

The other supporting cast member worth mentioning is English's sidekick, Colin Tucker (Daniel Kaluuya). Tucker's character is actually given some loose back story, and so he's something of a 2.5 dimensional character, but there simply isn't enough done with him to make him substantially different from Bough (pronounced "Boff") in the first movie, except, just as is the case with English, he's an actual agent rather than an office worker.

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Judgment

Johnny English Reborn isn't worthy of the extra word added to the title. "Reborn" is simply pushing things too far. "Improved" would've worked nicely and is much more accurate.

The improvements in some of the characters, in the use and execution of the jokes and gags, and in the character of Johnny himself suggest that the writers for this one (screenplay: Hamish McColl; story: William Davies) are an improvement over the writers (Neal Purvis, Robert Wade, and William Davies) for the last movie , but unless a movie by the name of Johnny English Renewed comes out in 2020 you shouldn't expect too much from this series.

That said, Johnny English Reborn is an improvement over the original in terms of comedy, but it steps backwards in terms of characters - a lot of this movie seems to be here simply because the standard elements of a spy movie are necessary for the comedic premise. Yet, the major thrust of that premise, Johnny English himself, has been improved, and so, though narrowly, this one gets a save.

Freya, swoop down and save this film from the likes of Gigli and The Love Guru.

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Closing

Next week watch this blog for the conclusion to my four part series on wind power in Ontario, an article on the newest news, and a search for the good in London Boulevard.

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