THE BOSS BABY: FAMILY BUSINESS: 3 ½ STARS
They grow up so fast, donât they? It was just four years ago that the Templetons welcomed a new child into the family. Ted was an odd baby who wore a suit onesie, carried a briefcase and spoke the language of the boardroom.
âI may look like a baby, but I was born all grown up,â he said in âThe Boss Baby.â
Cut to âThe Boss Baby: Family Business,â now playing in theatres. Older brother Tim (voiced by James Marsden) is now an adult and estranged from his âbossâ baby brother Ted (Alec Baldwin). Their lives have taken different paths. Tim is now married to Carol (Eva Longoria) and a suburban dad to seven-year-old daughter Tabitha (Ariana Greenblatt) and infant Tina (Amy Sedaris). Ted, unsurprisingly, is a hedge fund manager and workaholic.
Tabitha seems to be following in her uncleâs footsteps, attending the Acorn Center for Advanced Childhood. Sheâs at the top of her class but what she doesnât know is that Tina, the baby, is a spy for BabyCorp.
âIâm in the family business,â she says. âAnd now you work for me Boomers!â
Her mission? Find out exactly whatâs up at Tabithaâs school and if its founder, Dr. Erwin Armstrong (Jeff Goldblum) is really planning a baby revolution. âWe can make parents do whatever we want,â he yells.
The investigation brings the brothers, who drink a formula that turns them back into toddlers, together and reveals deep bonds.
âJust because you grow up,â says Tina, âdoesnât mean you have to grow apart.â
Like all sequels âBoss Baby: Family Businessâ is bigger, louder and more frenetic than the original. In a blur of colour and action, it uses kid-friendly humour and inventive animation to re-enforce a standard lesson about the importance of family.
The messaging may be generic, but the solid voice work from Marsden, Baldwin, Sedaris and Goldblum (who seems to be having a blast) inject vibrant life into it. This is essentially a one-joke premise dragged kicking and screaming into feature length, but director Tom McGrath expands the world of the first film (which he also directed) staging scenes with baby ninjas and inside Timâs head. There are no big surprises really, but he does keep much of the mischievousness that made the first film so enjoyable.
âThe Boss Baby: Family Businessâ moves at a rapid speed that may exhaust parents, but should keep young minds, who may have followed the adventures of the Boss Baby series on Netflix for the last four years, entertained.
THE TOMORROW WAR: 3 STARS
âThe Tomorrow War,â the new Chris Pratt sci-fi action film now streaming on Amazon Prime, is a unicorn. Itâs a big-budget blockbuster not inspired by a comic book or video game. The story resonates with echoes of âThe Terminator,â âAlienâ and any number of father-daughter dramas, but while it may feel familiar, itâs a rarity, an original movie that doesnât set itself up for a sequel.
Set in December 2022, Chris Pratt is Dan, biology teacher, Iraq War vet, husband to Emmy (Betty Gilpin) and father to young daughter Muri (Ryan Kiera Armstrong). One night, theyâre gathered around the television watching a game when the match is interrupted by visitors from the 2052 with a âcry for help across time.â
âWe are from thirty years from the future,â says the spokesperson. âWe are at war and our enemy is not human. We are losing. In eleven months, all will be lost unless you help us. You are our last hope.â
The planet goes into a panic. A worldwide draft is instituted and soon Dan is enlisted to jump thirty years forward to fight an alien species, named White Spikes, he knows nothing about. The tour of duty is only seven days, but few survive.
âYou are not fighting for your country,â heâs told. âYouâre fighting for the world.â
Dropped into the future in the middle of an alien hotspot, Danâs military training kicks in. With the help of Col. Forester (Yvonne Strahovski), he survives but when they put their heads together, they realize the key to beating the aliens isnât warfare, itâs science! The real solution is a poison serum that neuters the beasts. But, the question with time twisted logic is, can they make enough of it in time to stop the war before it even happens?
âWe are food,â Forester says, âand they are hungry.â
I have written around a MAJOR spoiler. Time travel stories have the benefit of playing around with their characterâs timelines but youâll hear nothing about that here. Suffice to say, Dan makes a life-changing discovery while stationed in the future and it affects everything he does from that moment onward, and I suppose, in the time that has already happened. (Time travel movies can get complicated.)
Moving on to the broad strokes.
There is a lot going on in âThe Tomorrow War.â
It has Marvel-style large action scenes mixed with horrorâthe White Spikes, and their weird gooey puke yellow blood, are plentiful and relentlessâfamily dramaâ"Iâm no hero,â Dan says, âI just want to save my daughter.ââ and even a child genius who provides a key piece of information in the war against the aliens. Director Chris McKay and screenwriter Zach Dean jam pack every scene with something, whether itâs Prattâs zippy one-liners or a city crumbling during an airstrike or doing battle in a cave with an angry White Spike.
It feels like all peaks with very few valleys.
To lure us in and make us care about the characters, there have to be moments where things arenât blowing up. McKay provides some of those, but Dean doesnât give us much in the way of character arcs in those quieter moments. Things happen to the characters, constantly, but rarely is anything of consequence revealed about them. âGlowâsâ Betty Gilpin, for instance, is present, and has a name, Emmy, but is given very little to do except be Danâs wife. More character work may have given us a reason to care when bad things happen.
Having said that, there are some fun moments of over-the-top alien action. A showdown between Dan, his father (J.K. Simmons) and a seemingly indestructible White Spike is a wild ride, but generic characters and the predictability of the story blunts much of the filmâs excitement.
SUMMER OF SOUL (âŚOR, WHEN THE REVOLUTION COULD NOT BE TELEVISED): 4 ½ STARS
Fifty-two years ago, during a hot, sticky New York summer, a music festival was filmed for posterity in front of a gigantic crowd. No, itâs not âWoodstock.â
That happened, but Iâm talking about The Harlem Cultural Festival, a star-studded, six-week extravaganza featuring everyone from Stevie Wonder and the 5th Dimension to Mahalia Jackson and Nina Simone that drew tens of thousands of people to Mount Morris Park (now Marcus Garvey Park). The concerts were filmed, but when no taker could be found for the footage, it sat, unseen for fifty years in the basement of a producer named Hal Tulchin.
Now rescued and wrestled into a two-hour documentary by Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson of the Roots, âSummer Of Soul (âŚOr, When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised),â now on Disney+, brims with excitement, pain, hope and, of course, dynamic performances and great music.
Part concert documentary, itâs a must-see if only for Nina Simoneâs performance of âBacklash Blues.â It is just one of the dozens of musical numbers, all expertly curated by Questlove, but here there is no sense of nostalgia, just the pure power of performance.
Mahalia Jackson and Mavis Staples bring another emotional highlight, duetting on Martin Luther king Jr.âs favorite gospel song âTake My Hand, Precious Lord.â The civil rights leader was assassinated the year before, and their singing brings out both the beauty and the ache inherent in the song and the circumstances.
Also deftly woven in are remembrances from people who were there, on stage and off. Marilyn McCoo wipes away a tear as she watches the footage of her band The Fifth Dimension. New York Times journalist Charlayne Hunter-Gault helps set the scene politically and culturally while
Rev. Jesse Jackson recalls the story behind the electric performance pf âTake My Hand, Precious Lord.â
Far from simply using the music and the festival as a framework for the film, Questlove mixes in, with the expert hand of a DJ who understands rhythm and syncopation, archival news footage and contemporary interviews. This approach provides much needed historical context and makes the effect of the music even more impactful.
The Harlem Cultural Festival took place at a time when music was changingâyou hear the influences of Latin Jazz and soul and gospel, all brewing together to create something newâand as the world changed. âSummer of Soulâ is the rare music documentary that balances the historical with the musical with such grace and power.
ZOLA: 3 ½ STARS
It had to happen. Weâve seen movies based on comic books, board games and trading cards. Now comes âZola,â a darkly comedic crime drama, now playing in theatres, that was inspired by a 148-tweet thread by AâZiah King a.k.a. @zolarmoon.
âYou wanna hear a story about why me and this b*tch here fell out?â she writes. âItâs kind of long but full of suspense.â
When we first meet Zola (Taylour Paige) she is a Detroit waitress trying to take an order from Stephani (Riley Keough) and her friend. Stephani is flirty, playfully inappropriate and soon the two bond. Both are exotic dancers, and share a similar world view. The very next day Stephani calls with an offer. She invites Zola on a road trip to Florida to perform at a strip club and make some fast cash.
Needing money, Zola hastily agrees, but suspicions are raised when Stephaniâs hapless boyfriend Derek (Nicholas Braun) and the mysterious X (Colman Domingo) come along for the cross-country drive.
Once in Florida, it becomes clear that Zola is in over her head, the target of a set-up by Stephani and X. Itâs going to be a long, dangerous weekend for everyone involved.
âZolaâ is much more than a Twitter storm. Director Janicza Bravo (who also co-wrote the script with Jeremy O. Harris) sets a frantic pace, unfurling the story with urgency, humour and clever sound design. The result is a slick look at a gritty story that places us in Zolaâs shoes. She made a bad decision to go south with someone she barely knew, but now, like her, weâre caught up as things spin out of hand.
The tour guides for this chaotic trip are Paige and Keough. They take turns stealing scenes, filling the screen with bravura performances.
Paige plays Zola as impetuous but strong, vulnerable but powerful. Zola could have been played as a victim, but Paige flips that script, allowing her character to be in control in an out-of-control situation.
The performance is at odds with Keoughâs work. She embraces Stephaniâs messiness, playing up the cavalier attitude that masks her characterâs pain. Itâs a nervy performance, both funny and tragic.
âZolaâ is a roller-coaster ride up until its final moments. An abrupt ending leaves many unanswered questions, but until then, it feels like the most in-the-moment 2021 movie to date.
LET US IN: 2 ½ STARS
In the tradition of âGoosebumpsâ and âGooniesâ comes âLet Us In,â a young adult horror film based on an urban myth and now playing on VOD.
Makenzie Moss stars as Emily, a Grade seven student who carries around guilt related to the mysterious disappearance of her sister. Her best friend, child genius Christopher (O'Neill Monahan), is working on a device to communicate with aliens, which is well timed, given that their town is overrun with space vampires known as the âblack-eyed kids.â They resemble pale skinned, hoody-wearing teens who spend too much time in the basement playing video games, but donât let looks deceive.
Based on an urban myth, these kids have black, soulless eyes, alabaster skin, the toxic odor of ârotten molasses and pig droppings,â and, as if that wasnât creepy enough, they harvest human adolescents, sending them away through a space portal.
Like earthbound vampires, the black-eyed kids donât like bright lights and have to be invited in to your home, hence the title âLet Us In.â Sounds polite, no? Well, thereâs also this. They donât like to be told ânoâ and will terrorize you until you say âyesâ and invite them onto your property.
With kids going missing all over town, Emily and Christopher use their wits to wage war with the aliens.
âLet Us Inâ has all the earmarks of young adult horror. Thereâs a creepy old guy (Tobin Bell) in a haunted house, plenty of jump scares, creaky doors and a child prodigy. What is doesnât have is a lot of thrills. The lo-fi story relies on throwback practical effects, dark contact lenses and loads of alabastrine make-up, but the hair on the back of your neck will never stand up.
Perhaps itâs because the space vampires donât seem particularly menacing. A stern talking to by any of the adults in the movie and I bet theyâd all run to their rooms.
So, no big scares, but itâs fun to see Tobin Bell, who played Jigsaw in the âSawâ series, provide his characterâs crazy backstory and loads of exposition in a scene that serves no real purpose other than to allow the veteran actor to have a bit of fun with some flowery language.
âLet Us Inâ is a generic kidâs horror film with a good idea, but not enough scares.