advertisement

3-D ‘Smurfs’ sequel panders to its kid audience

A sequel largely unwarranted other than for box office and promotional purposes, the unimaginatively titled “The Smurfs 2” should have little trouble scaling stratospheric heights similar to its predecessor with undiscriminating young audiences and their chaperones, weary from near-unrelenting summertime caregiving.

“Smurfs” director Raja Gosnell (“Beverly Hills Chihuahua,” “Scooby Doo”) has built his career with cute-critter pics and other family fare, and his middlebrow track record remains unblemished with the Smurfs’ sequel.

Beyond a few chuckle-worthy one-liners and some amusing visual comedy, there’s not much to engage adults, although the wee ones should be distracted enough.

Smurfette’s (Katy Perry) birthday presents the opportunity for her to recall her conflicted origins. Rather than a “true-blue” Smurf, she was created by the hapless, wannabe evil sorcerer Gargamel (Hank Azaria), who now intends to kidnap her from her enchanted-forest home to obtain the formula for the magical Smurf essence that Papa Smurf (Jonathan Winters) used to originally bestow her with blue-skinned bliss.

Once he has the secret, Gargamel plans to power up a host of Naughties, Smurf-sized creatures he’s created, to help him take over the world.

He dispatches his Naughty daughter Vexy (Christina Ricci) to drag Smurfette through a magic portal and into the real world where he can manipulate her inherent identity issues.

Papa Smurf and his mismatched extraction team Grouchy (George Lopez), Clumsy (Anton Yelchin) and Vanity (John Oliver) must travel to the real world and reunite in Paris with the sympathetic family of Patrick (Neil Patrick Harris) and Grace (Jayma Mays) Winslow, their live-action counterparts from the original movie.

Returning the movie to the European locale of the Belgian Smurfs comic-strip originator Pierre Culliford adds some visual interest (with Paris as the backdrop for the Smurfs’ rescue mission), but beyond the classic cityscapes, there’s little innovative in this formulaic follow-up.

In his final film role, Winters reprises the beneficent Papa Smurf with the requisite twinkle in his voice, but takes a back seat to Perry’s bewildered, wounded and ultimately outraged Smurfette.

Harris and Mays, as the parents of a young boy appropriately named Blue (Jacob Tremblay), acquit themselves good-naturedly enough.

Brendan Gleeson as Patrick’s well-intentioned but misunderstood stepfather, Victor Doyle, really shines in an all-out turn that gleefully showcases his comic gifts.

Azaria is equally antic as the incompetent wizard beset by the uneven, if unrelenting, team of Smurf rescuers.

With the exception of Gargamel’s awkwardly rendered CGI cat cohort Azrael, the mix of animation and live-action appears fairly seamless in a 3-D rendition that helps keep the movie from slipping into the overly saccharine variation favored by the fully animated 1980s TV series.

“The Smurfs 2”

. .

Starring: Katy Perry, Jonathan Winters, Hank Azaria, Brendan Gleeson, Neil Patrick Harris, Christina Ricci

Directed by: Raja Gosnell

Other: A Columbia Pictures release. Rated PG. 105 minutes

Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.