Incredibles 2
I learned a fun fact!
Director Brad Bird is the
Voice of Edna Mode.
It’s been forever since I last watched The Incredibles, and unlike most of my peers, I never fell head-over-heels for it. As far as Pixar movies goes, my allegiances lie with "Toy Story" and "A Bug’s Life." So while I haven’t spent the last 14 years yearning to return to the world of the Parr family (I had to Google their last name), I nonetheless enjoyed the sequel, though it did seem a bit misguided.
I saw "Incredibles 2" on a Saturday night, my first Saturday night in San Francisco alone after my mom left for home after a weekend of exploring the city and moving me in to my summer apartment. Naturally, I was hoping for Incredibles 2 to be Pixar at its most melancholy, and while the actual movie was relatively short on the emotions that elevate the best Pixar movies to Instant Classic status (read: Coco and Inside Out), the short film Bao that preceded it really hit home. If you happened to be at the Presidio Theatre at the 8:40 showing of Incredibles 2 last Saturday, you would’ve found me in the back row sobbing into my sweatshirt sleeve. So thank you for that, Pixar.
Despite the lack of a strong emotional core, everything you’ve heard about Incredibles 2 and know about Pixar is on full display here: the top-notch action sequences, the superior animation and the stellar voice-acting. Bob Odenkirk has become one of my favorite actors as of late, and once he’s done riding the Saul Goodman wave, I think he could really make a name for himself in animated flicks. Of course, if that’s something he’s interested in. But Jack-Jack and Edna Mode (Brad Bird) are the real standouts here. Jack-Jack is a scene-stealer by himself, and together they are comedic gold, honestly worth the price of admission alone.
Perhaps my biggest qualm with Incredibles 2 is that it never answered the question that I seem to be the only one to be asking. And that is, why? Why make a sequel to Incredibles 2, and why do it 14 years later? I’m sure there was a good reason (and I hope it’s not just that Millennials will pay the big bucks for a stroll down memory lane), but the plot they went with didn’t seem compelling enough to justify its existence. Mr. Incredible does Mr. Mom while Elastigirl does PR for superheroes. Was that sentence as unexciting to read as it was for me to type? Don’t get me wrong, Incredibles 2 has its moments and is a fun movie overall, I can’t help but feel like there was a better story to tell here.