|
Night at the Museum received a negative critical reception in the US but proved a runaway family favourite despite. The film is probably not entirely deservous of such a slagging at best, one could call it an amiable way to spend 108 minutes. There is a certain cuteness to the basic concept of the various exhibits at a museum coming to life by night and mixing it up and/or going to war. We get to see a very well animated dinosaur skeleton chasing one of its own bones around the halls like a dog; war between miniature Roman centurions and cowboys; an Easter Island moai that talks in goo-goo baby talk; animate statues and jade tigers; and various cavemen, monkeys and mummies come to life. At times, Night at the Museum reminds of Jumanji (1995), which likewise had a series of improbable things (various aspects of jungle adventure) let loose, much chaos ensuing and the hero left having to bring everything back to normal again. (Both Night at the Museum and Jumanji also incidentally feature Robin Williams). There is a good deal of fun to be had in watching the various characters from different eras colliding and in some of the effects. However, Night at the Museums central problem is eventually that it is a cute concept that fails to feel fully developed as a movie. The first two-thirds offer an amiable series of scenes with Ben Stiller dealing with the various exhibits come to life but it becomes increasingly apparent that is about all there is to the film. The last third of the film has to contrive (in a not-terribly-convincing twist) some villainy in order to give the comic running-arounds some drive and bring the film to a big climax. Night at the Museum was put together as a starring vehicle for Ben Stiller. Ben Stiller has become a comedy staple since he first came to A-list stardom in Theres Something About Mary (1998). I must admit that Stillers comedy roles in the likes of Mystery Men (1999), Meet the Parents (2000), Zoolander (2001), Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (2004), Starsky & Hutch (2004) and The Heartbreak Kid (2007) have left me cold. On the other hand, his far more serious work in intelligent but usually overlooked films like Your Friends & Neighbors (1998) and particularly Permanent Midnight (1998) is not too bad at all. Certainly, Night at the Museum is unlikely to go down as one of Ben Stillers more memorable performances. He takes the opportunity to play to the gallery and gives a performance that has some astonishingly silly moments, including making noises over a public address system or engaging in baby talk and making faces to a monkey. Stillers frequent collaborator Owen Wilson also uncreditedly turns up as a miniature cowboy where Wilsons laidback surfer drawl style of acting only proves irritating. The one who does well out of the show is Robin Williams who gives the best performance he has in some time as a proud and no nonsense man-of-action Teddy Roosevelt. Ben Stiller, director Shawn Levy and most of the supporting characters reunited for a sequel Night at the Museum 2 (2009). Night at the Museum was parodied in Disaster Movie (2008). Shawn Levy has been associated with other genre films such as the DC Comics adaptation The Flash. He later went onto make Real Steel (2011) about boxing robots. (Nominee for Best Special Effects at this sites Best of 2006 Awards).
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||