Tuesday, June 18, 2024
ADVT 
Movie Reviews

Movie Review: 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' entertaining teen fare

By Troy Ribeiro IANS, 29 Aug, 2014 10:19 AM
  • Movie Review: 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' entertaining teen fare
Cast: Megan Fox, Will Arnett, William Fichtner, Danny Woodburn, Noel Fisher, Jeremy Howard, Pete Ploszek, Alan Ritchson;
Director: Jonathan Liebesman;
Rating: *** 1/2
 
Packed with roller-coaster action, set in New York City, this science-fiction-action-adventure film is a reboot of a Gen-Y franchise that began in 1984 as a comic series, which was later adapted into television shows, video games and films. 
 
This is the fifth film in the series, which is a full recap of the turtles' original story and their epic conflict with the dastardly Foot Clan crime syndicate.
 
The narration begins with a prologue stating that darkness has settled over New York City as a criminal group called the Foot Clan headed by Shredder (Tohoru Masamune), a samurai, who dons a suit of armour, which basically turns him into Japanese Megatron, is terrorizing the city. And police can't do anything to prevent them.
 
The story follows April O'Neal, a budding journalist who wants to make a breakthrough with serious stories. Late one night, when she chances upon a group of mysterious vigilant crime fighters, who thrash the Foot Clan thugs, she thinks that this would be the story of her career.
 
Her colleagues think she is crazy, as she has no proof to substantiate her story.
 
When she further reveals to her boss Bernadette (Whoopi Goldberg) that the vigilantes have been leaving a mysterious Japanese symbol at the site of the purported crime, she is sacked from her job.
 
But April continues her investigation, which reveals that the vigilantes attacking the clan goons are a quartet of six-foot-tall, teenage mutated talking turtles with lethal ninja fighting skills. They are named after four Renaissance artists.
 
Leonardo (Pete Ploszek) in blue is the leader, Raphael (Alan Ritchson) in red is the beefy hothead, Michelangelo (Noel Fisher) in orange is the jovial, wisecracking flirt, and Donatello (Jeremy Howard) in purple is the tech geek.
 
Since nobody believes her, April turns to her father's ex-colleague and a wealthy industrialist Eric Sachs (William Fichtner) for help.
 
Meanwhile, the turtles living in the city's sewer system with the sagacious rat known as Splinter (Danny Woodburn), who has trained them in the skills of ninjutsu, making them martial arts experts, realise that it is April who is now in danger.
 
Soon they take April into confidence, but by then it is too late.
 
Massive noisy battles ensue. This followed by a chase that involves an 18-wheel trailer skidding over a snowy mountainous terrain.
 
The action is dramatic, complex and at the same time cartoonish. Humour comes in the form of heavily loaded pop-culture references. Kids would enjoy it. 
 
The climax threat, which has been often seen on screen, lacks punch.
 
The performance of each actor is perfectly tuned to the character they portray. But unfortunately, the characters designed by scriptwriters Josh Appelbaum, Andre Nemec and Evan Daugherty are shallow and don't have any depth and dynamism.
 
Director Jonathan Liebesman is brilliant with the technical treatment. Though this is an original story, there are traces of producer Michael Bay's "Transformers" throughout the narrative.
 
The computer-generated images seamlessly merge with cinematographer Lula Carvalho's brilliantly shot visuals, which are competently put together by editors Glen Scantlebury and Joel Negron.
 
Overall, despite blatant product placements, the technically brilliant visuals and matching performances make the film worth a watch.

MORE Movie Reviews ARTICLES

Movie Review: 'Muppets Most Wanted' charming film, wasted celebrities

Movie Review: 'Muppets Most Wanted' charming film, wasted celebrities
At the very outset of this musical extravaganza you are warned, "We are doing a sequel and everyone knows that sequels aren't quite good". You could either take this literally or with a pinch of salt.  Either way, the film is a mediocre fare, punctuated with run-of-the-mill gigs and sparkles that are aimless and trying hard to please

Movie Review: 'Muppets Most Wanted' charming film, wasted celebrities

Movie Review: Sunny Leone's 'Ragini MMS 2' is hardly spooky

Movie Review: Sunny Leone's 'Ragini MMS 2' is hardly spooky
Watching "Ragini MMS 2" is like playing Russian Roulette with the lights off. You know someone is pulling the trigger and trying to fire random shots at unidentified victims. Every trick from the horror genre is brought into use

Movie Review: Sunny Leone's 'Ragini MMS 2' is hardly spooky

Movie Review: '3 Days To Kill' cliched plot with unconvincing graph

Movie Review: '3 Days To Kill' cliched plot with unconvincing graph
Overall, with respectable action scenes and good production quality, the visuals are well laid and edited. Director McG has managed to put up a good show, but the film lacks the wow factor. 

Movie Review: '3 Days To Kill' cliched plot with unconvincing graph

Movie Review: 'Battle of the Damned' hackneyed zombie film with no flesh

Movie Review: 'Battle of the Damned' hackneyed zombie film with no flesh
To watch "Battle of the Damned" is like rotting in hell with zombies, killer robots, obtuse-damned survivors and an overdose of innate absurdity that is prevalent in the film.

Movie Review: 'Battle of the Damned' hackneyed zombie film with no flesh

Movie Review: 'Bewakoofiyaan' Is Just Frothy Fun

Movie Review: 'Bewakoofiyaan' Is Just Frothy Fun
Rishi brings to the characters a cornocupia of "cool". Seldom in his any other recent film except "Do Dooni Chaar" has this brilliant actor expressed such pleasure in putting forward his character's point of view.

Movie Review: 'Bewakoofiyaan' Is Just Frothy Fun

Movie Review: 'Gulaab Gang' is Chick Flick With A Social Conscience

Movie Review: 'Gulaab Gang' is Chick Flick With A Social Conscience
The film has its heart in the right place. It portrays rural oppression of women with honesty. But the brutality is brittle and sometime laughable. 

Movie Review: 'Gulaab Gang' is Chick Flick With A Social Conscience