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This is the blog where I talk about the latest movies I've seen. These are my two Schnauzers, Rufus (left) and Marley (right, RIP). As of now, the Double Hollywood Strikes are officially over. May the next strikes not last as long as these ones did.

Thursday, January 2, 2020

Spies in Disguise

I wasn't in the mood for a serious film this New Year's Day. So I went for the birds. Fox's animated spy comedy Spies in Disguise is here for some family-friendly superspy action. Let's get on the case.

Lance Sterling (Will Smith) is the best secret agent of HTUV. On his latest mission, he's sent to take back an Attack Drone from arms dealer Katsu Kimura (Masi Oka). But it falls into the hands - one being a robot claw - of supervillain Killian (Ben Mendelsohn). To make it worse, Killian frames Lance for the theft. Lance goes on the run. Special Agent Marcy Kappel (Rashida Jones) leads the manhunt against him.

Lance tracks down HTUV teen genius Walter Beckett (Tom Holland), who he dismissed hours earlier, and asks him for his newest invention: "biodynamic concealment." The potion changes Lance into a pigeon. They immediately go on the run to find Killian. While Lance insists he flies solo, literarily this time, he needs Walter's help to find the bad guys and get un-birded.

The film credits Lucas Martell's animated short Pigeon Impossible as the inspiration. That had a secret agent, also named Walter Beckett, deal with a pigeon in his flying, laser-shooting, nuclear suitcase. That's not what the writers - Cindy Davis, Brad Copeland and Lloyd Davis - thought up here. It's still a silly spy spoof involving a pigeon. The best gags involve Walter's non-lethal inventions; among them, glitter bombs that summon images of kittens. I wasn't too keen on the crude humor, though. It still takes Killian very seriously.

Its non-violence moral is simplistic. Lance embraces explosive weaponry because other agents died. We don't get to know any of these agents, but OK. Walter gets it better because we know he lost someone: his mother, Wendy, a police officer. We understand why he embraces non-violent weaponry. Killian gets it worst. He also lost people on the job, but he was a bad guy then and now. If anything, Lance's prior fight with him made him worse. It's hard to empathize with Killian. But it's easy to laugh when the final fight has the good guys embrace Walter's inventions.

It's also easy to embrace these characters. Lance starts off as an entertainingly arrogant secret agent. The film makes his character development into a team player fun to watch. Walter is likable all the way through. Lance's fellow pigeons, Lovey, Jeff and Crazy Eyes, are a fun bunch of birds. Killian, as I already alluded, is a very formidable threat. Marcy and her team, Eyes and Ears, are a good bunch of misguided antagonists. Overall, there's nobody to hate but the villain.

Some gross gags aside, it's one of the best looking animated films around. The production design by Michael Knapp visualizes some stunning locals from bad guy lairs to HTUV headquarters. The first fight scene is a visually stunning brawl between Lance and many Yakuza men. The animated cinematography by Renato Falcao makes it worthy of the big screen. The opening and end credits are appealing homages to James Bond's title scenes. There's also a good score by Theodore Shapiro to set the moods.

Spies in Disguise isn't an emotionally demanding film. There's a few deep moments, but you'll notice the silliness even more. Fortunately, its gags are more hit than miss. It's a good family matinee for a slow afternoon. But if you want a more serious spy caper, wait a few months for Daniel Craig's final, for real this time, James Bond film, No Time to Die.

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