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Overview
En 1935, Rick O’Connell et sa femme Evelyn mènent une vie paisible à Londres avec Alex, leur fils talentueux. Mais une nouvelle catastrophe se prépare dans les profondeurs du désert saharien. Six mille ans avant notre ère, le roi Scorpion, fit un pacte avec le dieu Anubis, qu’il trahit. Damné pour l’éternité, il est sur le point de sortir des limbes et de lever l’armée d’Anubis pour dévaster la planète. Une secte mystérieuse et avide de pouvoir menée par le diabolique Lock Nah et la séduisante Meela, ramènent à la vie la seule créature capable de faire face au roi Scorpion : le grand prêtre Imhotep, condamné depuis trois mille ans à errer comme un mort‐vivant pour avoir séduit la favorite du Pharaon. Sa momie est entreposée dans une salle secrète du British Museum. Ardeth Bay, chef militaire des Medja, implore O’Connell d’empêcher ce forfait aux conséquences désastreuses.
Cast
- Brendan Fraser as Rick O'Connell
- Rachel Weisz as Evelyn O'Connell / Nefertiri
- John Hannah as Jonathan Carnahan
- Oded Fehr as Ardeth Bay
- Arnold Vosloo as Imhotep
- Patricia Velásquez as Meela / Anck-Su-Namun
- Freddie Boath as Alex O'Connell
- Dwayne Johnson as Mathayus / The Scorpion King
- Alun Armstrong as Baltus Hafez
- Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje as Lock-Nah
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Reviews
_Final rating:★★★ - I personally recommend you give it a go._
I'm a fan of the first movie from 1999 and was naturally looking forward to this 2001 sequel. I originally saw it at the theater with two friends; after about 10-15 minutes we were all bored by the bombardment of action and F/X. We just laid back in our seats in tedium for the remaining couple hours.
It's a curious thing that too much action and F/X in a film can be boring. It may not seem logical but it's true; and "The Mummy Returns" is Exhibit A. I usually give certain movies second and third chances in the hope that my first impression may have been in error, which I’ve done with this one over the years. Unfortunately I keep finding myself relatively detached from the story even though there are all kinds of exciting things going on; or, at least, things that SHOULD HAVE been exciting.
"The Mummy Returns" has a lot going for it: A great cast, locations, costumes, cinematography, F/X, etc. (although some of the CGI is woefully cartoony, like the Scorpion King at the close). It has great Indiana Jones appeal. Unfortunately it all adds up to a forgettable piece of cinematic dung. What went wrong? Simply put, no substance. "The Mummy Returns" abandons the characters while the plot is utilized as a clothesline for action and F/X sequences.
The flick curiously has so many ingredients right, but it somehow utterly fails to absorb the viewer. It is unadulterated cinematic JUNK. It should be utilized in filmmaking classes as the quintessential example of style over substance or overKILL: having all the right elements, including budget, and yet stupefyingly fumbling the ball.
The film runs 2 hours, 10 minutes (overlong), and was shot in England, Morocco, Jordan and Egypt.
GRADE: C-
After the financial success of "The Mummy" two years earlier, the sequel was inevitable. The big players from the first film are back, Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz, John Hannah, Arnold Vosloo and Oded Fehr. Stephen Sommers once again directs (and writes), Patricia Velasquez comes in to be a main player after her cameo in the first film, and young Freddie Boath plays the son of Rick and Evelyn who are now married. This time the cameo goes to Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson who plays The Scorpion King and who is replaced by a very bad CGI version of himself at film's finale.
When the second sequel, "The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor" (2008), was released, Brendan Fraser went on record as saying that for "The Mummy Returns" they basically remade the film they had already made in 1999! This is absolutely true, some new characters and an expansion on the O'Connell romance have been put in to beef it up, while some Zombie Pygmies are around to add extra monster factor, but yes! It's a re-tread only with more money spent, more effects (and better effects apart from Scorpion King) and more noise. This actually is OK for those who enjoyed the first film immensely, because "Returns" is every bit as enjoyable as family blockbuster entertainment. The Worldwide box offices rang to the tune of over $330 million in profit. That's a lot of happy families you would think!.
So yes, it's a bit of a cheat, but much like the film before it, it gets away with it because the makers do everything they can to entertain the action/adventure loving crowd. With legions of Anubis warriors, those awesome Pygmies and the all round funny by-play between a cast comfortable with the material (again), "The Mummy Returns" delivers exactly what can reasonably be expected of it. 7/10
I still wouldn't say that the below par effects affected my enjoyment terribly much, like last time, but due to the (what felt like) increase of its usage it definitely becomes a bit of an eyesore this time out. The Scorpion King towards the conclusion looks particularly poor, I gotta say.
Cast-wise, I could copy and paste what I said about the 1999 flick. Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz are good together, I like the addition of their son (played well by Freddie Boath) into the mix. Also in my review of <em>'The Mummy'</em>, I noted that I wanted more of Oded Fehr, well I got that wish delivered here.
Quite interesting to see Dwayne Johnson appear as The Scorpion King, a character (and therefore franchise; five of them!) that I never knew existed until very recently. Given Johnson's upward acting trajectory since these films, I assume he didn't appear in all of those other spin-offs; I'll soon find out, intrigued to watch 'em either way.