“Best multimedia solutions. Individual approach.
24/7 Fair, Balance,
News & Information”

Movie Review | Pink Panther 2

Posted by admin on Mar 20th, 2009 and filed under Entertainment, Movies. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

As beloved, bungling Inspector Clouseau tries to solve a crime, things go from the sublime to the ridiculous.

Pink Panther 2By Bill Wine
Mar. 19, 2009

RATING: PG
GENRE: Comedy
RELEASE DATE: February 6, 2009
RUNNING TIME: 92 minutes
VIOLENCE FACTOR: Only exaggerated comic action
BAD WORDS: A brief reference or two
RACY?: A dash of mildly suggestive humor, handled innocently enough

GRANDS:

movie_grand_on movie_grand_on movie_grand_off movie_grand_off movie_grand_off

CRITIQUE: It’s a habit to complain about something not living up to the standards of the original. But sometimes it’s so obvious, there’s no other way to go.

The beloved Pink Panther flicks – starring Peter Sellers as Inspector Clouseau and directed by Blake Edwards – delighted audiences in the 1960s and 1970s with their rib-tickling humor.

Comedian Steve Martin’s desire to take a shot at the Clouseau role seemed a reasonable ambition, but the 2006 version of The Pink Panther – although commercially successful – was strained and terribly uneven.

The sequel is worse.

Grandparents who want to introduce their grandchildren to Sellers’ beloved, bungling detective with the French-fried accent will find a few traces of that charm in Martin’s performance. But the film is an indifferent, by-the-numbers work, frenetic when it ought to be relaxed and drenched in awkward comic timing.

The cast feels overstuffed and underemployed. Jean Reno and Emily Mortimer return as Clouseau’s assistant and secretary, and John Cleese replaces Kevin Kline as Clouseau’s exasperated superior and nemesis, Inspector Dreyfus. Also crammed in are Alfred Molina, Andy Garcia, Jeremy Irons, Lily Tomlin, and Aishwarya Rai. They’ve made a movie crowded with talent standing around with nothing to do.

Slapstick humor can be irresistible fun. But when it’s made up of carelessly choreographed stunts and heavy-handed camera coverage, it can be an embarrassment, as in this film.

How far this funny, farcical franchise has fallen.

Grandchildren, new to Clouseau and never having experienced Sellers, may not know what they’re missing. Grandparents will.

www.grandparents.com

GP Rating System:

Four Grands = Bravo, don’t miss it

Three Grands = Pretty good, short list it

Two Grands = Just okay, don’t dismiss it

One Grand = Yeah, we dissed it

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Log in ~ Copyright 2007-2009 DS Publishing & Entertainment Internet Corp., All rights reserved.
Web Site Design & Development Internet Marketing Nashua-Boston