Space Jam: A New Legacy (2021)
Audiences in the pre-CGI era must have been blown away they first saw a 2D animated character interact with live-action footage. When Gene Kelly tapped danced with Jerry the mouse in 1946’s Anchor’s Away viewers must have been astounded. It was such an apparent miracle that more than 40 years later, the much more VFX-savvy viewers of the 80s were still captivated by the use of the technique in Who Framed Roger Rabbit? Warner Bros tried to recreate Disney’s success with their own stable of iconic characters in 1996’s Space Jam. Saying it wasn’t quite in the same league would be putting it mildly, but The Joe Pytka directed original is still a nostalgic highlight for many.
To those who grew up with it, it still holds a special place in their heart.
It's unsurprising that Warners has been trying to get a sequel off the ground
for years, hoping to capture that same audience as well as the new generation.
But it took until the summer of 2021 when the long-awaited
Space Jam: A New Legacy finally hit cinemas (also releasing day and
date on HBO Max).
With so much time having passed, the sequel shares none of the original
key creative team. Girl’s Trip and Scary Movie 5 director
Malcolm D Lee steps in taking over from Pytka (who never directed
another feature before or after Space Jam. The four original screenwriters
have been replaced by six (!) new writers, credited alongside four with a
“Story By” credit. It seems it took an awful lot of people to come
up with the writing for A New Legacy. In retrospect, that might
actually help to explain a lot.
In fact, the plot of this “legacy sequel” has precious little to do with
the original. Apart from a couple of throwaway references that suggest
this is in the same continuity, there is essentially no explicit
reference to the first film in the text of the sequel. So the fact that
The Looney Tunes end up teaming up with an NBA superstar
to play a life-of-death game of Basketball for a second time is what,
just a coincidence? It might as well be a remake as a sequel, for the
most part.
Stepping into the considerable shoes of original star
Michael Jordan is LeBron “The King “James, one of the few
players whose career could be said to rival Jordan. ( Or so I’ve heard,
what do I know about Basketball?). The film takes its time with the
fully live-action intro, first showing us a flashback to the young James
throwing away his Game Boy (and Looney Tunes cartridge) to focus
on honing his basketball skills. In the present day, James is trying to
push his sons to follow in his footsteps. Youngest son Dom (Cedric Joe) is a tech prodigy and would be rather making his own videogames,
causing some tensions.
As an olive branch, LeBron asks if Dom would like to tag along to
a meeting he has scheduled at Warner Bros Studios. For reasons
that are too unnecessarily complicated to explain, both Dom and LeBron
are sucked into the supercomputer “Serververse” by the evil
Al G Rhythm (played by Don Cheadle, appearing in
live-action).
The Serververse apparently contains everything that
WarnerMedia owned when the movie was made (apparently apart from
the original Space Jam). Predictably, Mr Rythm ends up challenging James
to a B-Ball game- based on the game Dom programmed, no less- to win both
their freedom. Trying to recruit a team from the many worlds of the
Serververse, James ends up running into one Bugs Bunny, who helps
him put together a team of toons.
It takes a surprising amount of time to get to their first meeting, but
when it does, the animation is pretty solid. One of this film’s chief
appeals is that it is the first
Warner Bros Animation theatrically released film to feature 2D
for decades. The 2D animators have done a decent job of recreating the
look of the iconic Cartoon cast with a modern sheen, and that is
definitely one of the film’s key strengths.
As Bugs and James travel the Serververse looking for the Tune Squad (who
have all gone their own separate ways) it flirts with different
animation styles as we pass through different worlds. Encounters with
Batman and Superman take on the look of DC Animated
productions. Best of all though is the sequence in which
Lola Bunny (now voiced by Zendaya for no apparent reason)
now living in Wonder Woman’s home
of Themyscira takes on the challenge to become an
Amazon (while pursued by Bugs and co). In the most dynamic and memorable
sequence in the film, its animation style apes a comic book page come to
life. Like a 2D cousin to Into The Spider-Verse.
Keeping the 2D style all the way through would apparently have been a
step too far. When the pivotal game actually kicks off (and it takes
plenty of time to get there) the Tune Squad are given “an upgrade”,
turning into CG versions of themselves. The CG models are well done and
do a more than adequate job of translating the classic designs into
three dimensions. Whatever this film’s shortcomings (and there are many)
none of the blame should go to the animation team. Or apparently any of
the credit, according to Warner Bros
who didn’t think the full team worthy of including in the end
credits. It was only after public outcry they decided to ‘honour’ them all
with a tweet.
Also, credit should do go to the veteran voice actors who gave voice to
the characters such as Jeff Bergman, who has been voicing Bugs
since the 90s, Bob Bergen (Tweety) and Eric Bauza (Daffy
Duck, Porky Pig and Foghorn Leghorn).
The idea of the characters playing basketball against aliens was a
fundamentally un-Looney idea. The concept of “The Looney Tunes” as a group
of characters who know each other, live together and are friends is a modern
invention that never really existed in the original shorts. The thought that
Sylvester and Tweety or Wile E Coyote and Roadrunner would be
on the same team is opposed to the very spirit of the shorts they first
appeared in. This attempt to re-position them as a Muppets-like or
Mickey and Friends type gang feels like it never really landed. And
it is true even moreso in this sequel.
It just doesn’t feel right for them to be in life-or-death situations. The
characters were constantly blown up, flattened and hit by trains- they
were indestructible by their very nature. It seems like an absolute
mistake to have them contemplate their mortality. There are comedic
characters who can shift gear to dramatic moments and pull it off- and
there’s the Looney Tunes. Bugs Bunny should not be seen to selflessly
sacrifice himself (spoilers: he turns out fine).
Another in-built problem is the fact that the films are based around
non-actors. LeBron James’s performance isn’t exactly horrible, but it
lacks any real spark. He doesn’t have much of a screen presence and is
constantly acted off the screen by his on-screen son played by
Good Trouble’s Cedric Joe. Sonequa Martin-Green (Star Trek Discovery
and The Walking Dead star) does the best she can with a thankless
role as James’s screen wife and there are likeable enough turns from
Khris Davis, Ceyair J Wright and Xosha Roquemore. Brief
cameos from Stephen Yeun, Sarah Silverman and
Michael B Jordan aren’t enough to make up for the lack of any
entertaining live-action performers such as Bill Murray in the
original. As the villainous AI Al G Rhythm Cheadle delivers
his most embarrassing performance since that accent in the
Oceans Eleven series.
Technically, this is a sports movie (albeit a very atypical one) so
how much that element works for you will vary on how much into sports
you are. The NBA references and parade of players appearing is going
to go over the head of much of the audience outside of the United
States. Even James himself, while a mega-star in the States does not
have the same cache outside major Basketball playing countries. The
culturally savvy may have heard of him, but he doesn’t have the same
name recognition that Jordan did (and still does) even with the
terminally unsporty worldwide.
Armchair critics dismissed the film based on the trailers for its
corporate nature and declared it a soulless cash-grab. But then the
same could be levelled at the original, and it certainly has its fans.
There isn’t anything fundamentally wrong with the idea of filling the
film with references to WarnerMedia’s gigantic vault of IPs. There’s
certainly a novelty to seeing a crowd where
The Wicked Witch Of The West, King Kong, The Scooby Gang, The Iron
Giant, Adam West’s Batman and Game Of Throne’s Ice King can be seen cheering on the
game.
However, it's what they do with it that counts. When
Lord and Miller did similar with all of the licences in
The LEGO Movie
it felt like they were making the most of playing with all the toys in
their playbox. Without the wit and playfulness of that script, here it
never feels like anything much more than an extended commercial for
HBO Max. Plus, some of the included characters here feel
inappropriate for a family film. The Droogs from
A Clockwork Orange most infamously, but also others such as
killer clown Pennywise from Stephen King's It and a
demonic nun from notorious 1971 Ken Russell erotic horror film The Devils (!).
Probably due to studio restrictions, there’s no satire here. It falls
prey to the worse kind of “reference comedy”, the idea that simply
referencing something is enough. By all means, if you think Foghorn
Leghorn riding a dragon and saying “Winter, I say, Winter is Coming”
or Elmer Fudd as Mini Me in Austin Powers is
hilarious then go nuts. You’re probably going to have a good
time.
On the other hand, if you want for a film to actually have something
to add, and to actually be funny, then A New Legacy is likely
to be a disappointment. The film is an unholy mess, which seems a
likely result of too many cooks. The many credited writers are often
the sign of a troubled script, that many screenwriters have struggled
to get right. And in those cases, as here, it rarely ends well.
The old “it’s for kids” defence won’t wash as the best family stuff
works for all ages. Besides, kids deserve better than this. If it's
modern Looney Tunes you’re after, you’ll be best off sticking to
the new shorts.
★☆☆☆☆