Murder Mystery 2 Review

Broadcast on: Netflix

The rare film from Adam Sandler’s cheap and cheerful Netflix stable to get a sequel, it really is More of the Same, Squared. If you’ve seen a Sandler comedy in the past decade, you’ll know exactly what to expect. murder mystery 2and frankly if you’ve already seen the original murder mystery, you’ll have a good idea of ​​how things are going to play out. He’s a pretty basic, by numbers, Golden Retriever puppy out of a movie: goofy, down-to-earth, sometimes annoying, sometimes adorable, hard to really hate.

An effective pre-title montage “Formerly in…” offers a brief recap of the previous film, preparing husband and wife Nick (Sandler) and Audrey (the ever-charismatic Jennifer Aniston) to embark on their new lives as private detectives, desperately search for a solution. a murder. Naturally, one falls to one’s knees soon enough when invited to the lavish wedding of returning character Vikram (Adeel Akhtar, in a cinematic romance very different from his role in Clio Barnard’s film). Ali and Ava).

Then begins an extremely loose twist on an Agatha Christie mystery, in which everyone is a suspect, everyone has a motive and everyone has a chance. It’s perhaps unfortunate that this film’s release date falls some distance from Rian Johnson’s Benoit Blanc, which sets the gold standard for a whodunit with a comedic twist: glass onion it’s much funnier, much more enigmatic in its mystery, much more subversive in its approach. But this is certainly an unfair comparison.

It’s just another vehicle for Sandler to pull off his well-oiled stunt with his buddies.

Sure, there’s a mystery here, a surprise reveal, and an extra twist for good measure. But really, it’s just another way for Sandler to have his well-oiled schtick with his friends, done with an almost willful lack of imagination (a trip to Paris is characterized, wittily, with shots of the establishment of the Eiffel Tower, of the Moulin Rouge, and the Louvre, in that order). The comedy, like the first film, is almost proudly first base: the couple awkwardly try dancing at an Indian wedding, obsess over good cheese, and make some cheap comments about bionic penises. It’s almost childishly provocative.

Thus, the success rate of the gags, by default, is never more than intermittent. But whether it’s firing two guns by sticking out his tongue or taking his ensemble from one glamorous location to another, Sandler clearly enjoys living his best life: making comedic films as a pure filmmaker wishes, and it’s at such a prolific stage in his incredible career that it’s hard to truly envy him. However, with a blunt and prosaic title like that, what else can we expect?

Source: EmpireOnline