Watched: 10/02/2024
Format: Peacock
Viewing: First
Director: Alex Kurtzman
She had style!
She had flair!
She was there!
That's how she became... the Mummy!
This is an amazingly wrong-headed and bad movie. I really don't want to write it up, because it's going to take forever. It's problems are legion, and it's astounding to think Universal went so hard at the "Dark Universe" concept and then this was their maiden flight. A maiden flight which took off, did a loop-de-loop before crashing back into the airport, and which immediately killed the entire concept. Thank God.
If you need a refresher: in the wake of the success of Marvel's Avengers movies making a billion dollars each, Universal looked to see what IP they had laying around to exploit. And, since the silent era, Universal has had classic horror in their stable. Dracula, Frankenstein, Bride of, Wolfman, The Mummy, Creature from the Black Lagoon, Invisible Man... all Universal. What Universal decided to do was create a world in which these creatures co-exist and... fight crime? I don't know. And this movie didn't say, despite the fact all they do is stand around and explain things to the detriment of plot, character, and enjoyment of the very thing you're watching.
There was plenty of precedent. By the 1940's, the sequels had been bubbling up, and we did see Wolfman meet Frankenstein, and all of the monsters show up in Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (which was, obvs, a horror-comedy, but featured the characters as audiences knew them in the straight movies).
Around 2015-16,Universal signed with major stars and were going to do this. Tom Cruise! Johnny Depp! Angelina Jolie! Russell Crowe! Utterly missing the fact the stars of the originals were barely the actors - it was the concept. They did so, so much press about this, and everyone kind of said "...why would you do this press? Just make the movies." But, nope, so high on their own supply, they ran into the streets to tell people about it, and then it blew up in their faces immediately, like Wile E. Coyote with dynamite.
The Mummy (2017) is the Tom Cruise-starring action-monster-not-horror vehicle that took the name and a few concepts from the original The Mummy movie and the subsequent Universal sequels, and turns it into a very expensive actioner devoid of plot, characters, charisma or joy. Or fear. It's a painful slog through scenes shot without enough light to ever see anything (Dark Universe! HA!), wherein you can feel Cruise's people touching up a script that's already overstuffed, but with dollar-store baloney.