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Recall,
if you are secure enough in your manhood, those John Hughes
films of the mid-80s: perturbed teens discovering themselves
blah blah. Further recall, if you dare, the Batman
franchise under the frivolous wrist of Joel Schumacher:
all coruscating color and comic-book éclat.
If you've an appetite for distraction (and a high tolerance
for pap), take these two disparate milieux, pop into blender,
push-button "pulverize" and voila! - two
bland ingredients syruping an even blander cocktail: Sky
High - teens discovering themselves blah blah amidst
coruscating color and comic-book éclat.
To
accuse this movie of cliché is to accuse Richard
Simmons of homosexuality; that is, though it would like
to think of itself as otherwise - it's way too obvious
The
movie almost rights itself in the weak-beer-drenched waters
of teen-movie plagiarism with the droll premise that these
discomfited teens are the offspring of Superheroes. Even
so, that concept can be appreciated only until one realizes
how securely Superhero Movies have entrenched themselves
as an economic cog on Wall Street (i.e. if the next Spiderman
or X-Men bombs, a lot of parents are going to
be raising their children on shoe-flavored soup). Therefore,
it comes as no surprise that every facet of the genre will
be mined for profits, initially with seemingly "original"
angles, but ultimately simply fulfilling cookie-cutter demand.
There is already the high ground (Spiderman, X-Men),
the low ground (Fantastic Four, Daredevil), the so-so
(Hulk, Blade Trinity); there is the watershed (Batman
Begins), the animation (The Incredibles), the
real-world grit (Punisher) and the simply woeful
(Elektra - which also caters to the SHE-ro department),
each niche being filled as quickly as market analysts can
identify the vacuum.
But don't be surprised when the Ideas Men, choking on the
synthetic meat of their unoriginality, realize they've painted
themselves into demographic corners, and start peddling
Superhero movies which mimic "reality shows",
or feature Super-Animals (Krypto, anyone?), or Superhero
cameos of Danny Bonaduce, Mini-Me or Paris Hilton. (Even
the Dark Knight has never known such dark days
)
For the time being, we are primed to contend with the Superhero
"Teen Comedy". And it is enjoyable enough - if
you've been vacationing as resolutely as George W. Bush,
removed from all public media and cultural dynamics. But
if you've seen one teen movie which elevates the hormonally-drenched
pseudo-problems of libidinous, over-privileged, studiously-hip
teens to the import of a United Nations Symposium on Global
Oil Embargos, you've seen 'em all. This one just has people
wearing capes in it.
Despite
its abject impossibility, we can readily accept the concept
of Sky High University (an exclusive campus for Superhero
offspring, floating miles above the earth), thanks to our
cultural inundation over these past few years with a surfeit
of Superhero movie-fare. Consequently, none of the "powers"
exhibited by the kids requires exposition, as we've grown
so accustomed to the idiom: a bully blowing icy breath and
freezing another kid where he stands is accepted without
question; as is a girl who can duplicate herself, or a boy
who can throw fireballs. Yawn.
Attending Sky High U is Will Stronghold (Michael Angarano),
son of the world's two highest-profile Superheroes (The
Commander and Jetstream - Kurt Russell and Kelly Preston,
both wearing tights deployed for maximum prurient effect
in the opposite gender), facing his coming-of-age dilemma:
to hang with the Heroes and bang the slutty chick or mope
with the Nerds and get roped into a "relationship"
with the homely chick. Oh, the mind-scarring problems of
over-privileged American teens!
Two Kids In The Hall alumni (Kevin McDonald and Dave
Foley) perform valiantly to elevate the comedy (as has-been
Heroes reduced to teaching positions at the university),
but the movie's unfortunate focus on the hipster contingent
relegates these and other veteran actors to the outskirts
of the prosaic plot. Kurt Russell, an underrated comedic
talent, seemed set to spark proceedings into a meaty joviality,
but ultimately, was given so little to do (besides embodying
the "Ideal" of the Superhero and waxing effusive
over his son's coming-of-age) that we were reduced to marveling
at the magnificent acting prowess of Kelly Preston's breasts.
Thus,
whilst marveling at those Mounds Of Justice, did I come
- er, of age.
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