NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM 2 (PG).
Family/Action/Comedy/Romance. Ben Stiller, Amy Adams, Hank Azaria, Owen Wilson, Steve Coogan, Robin Williams, Christopher Guest, John Benthal, Alain Chabat. Director: Shawn Levy.
HISTORY is brought vividly to life with a dazzling array of computer-generated effects in Night At The Museum 2, a soulless exercise in digital might over emotional substance.
Directed once again by Shawn Levy, who is aided and abetted by the cast of the 2006 family-oriented blockbuster, the sequel, which at times is hysterically funny, continues the misadventures of the living exhibits from New York City’s famed Museum Of Natural History.
Screenwriters Robert Ben Garant and Thomas Lennon allow the visual effects team to run riot by relocating the storyline to the largest museum complex in the world: the hallowed halls of the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.
Security guard Larry has left behind his old job at the museum to front Daley Devices infomercial products, which has just launched the glow-in-the-dark torch. Returning to his old haunt, Larry is distraught to learn from Dr McPhee (Gervais) that many of the old exhibits are being replaced by state-of-the-art holographs, condemning cowboy Jed (Wilson), mighty Roman emperor Octavius (Coogan) and Native American tracker Sacajawea (Peck) to storage in Washington.
On arrival at their new home, Jed and co are attacked by cranky pharaoh Kahmunrah (Azaria), who was woken from his centuries of slumber by an ancient Egyptian tablet and intends to take over the world with the help of Ivan The Terrible (Guest), Al Capone (Benthal) and Napoleon Bonaparte (Chabat).
Larry races to the rescue, flanked by gutsy new acquaintance Amelia Earhart (Adams).
Night At The Museum 2 regurgitates everything that worked in the first film and features new characters including The Wright Brothers.
Stiller and Adams gel nicely, the latter luminous as a gal who says what she thinks, telling Larry plainly, “What I see in front of me is a man who has lost his moxie”. Painful.
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