The LEGO Movie 2: The Second Part
Could’ve been better,
But def could’ve been much worse.
It’s a sophomore slump.
As arguably the biggest LEGO Movie fan over the age of 11, I was beyond excited to make it to The LEGO Movie 2: The Second Part. I had to wait until my homie Daniel was home for spring break (and of course Mizzou has one of the latest spring breaks of any public school), and when he came home, we jumped at the first opportunity we got to see our favorite building blocks on the big screen. So, it’s with great dismay that I have to report that the fourth outing in the LEGO-verse was not only the weakest entry I’ve seen thus far (I skipped Ninjago, but I’ll catch it on HBO some day), but also the weakest work I’ve seen from Lord Miller Productions. It naturally lacked the freshness of the original’s concept, and no scene in this sequel made Daniel and me laugh as this one from the Batman spinoff. But of course, it goes without saying that a weak movie from Phil Lord and Christopher Miller is still miles beyond 90% of everything else getting made right now.
Before I get my hate on, let me just say that The Lego Movie 2 is a good movie. My expectations were high, and they unfortunately weren’t met. Nor was my laugh quota. I chuckled a bunch, sure, but I never lost my shit in the way that I’ve come to expect from the LEGO movies. The throwaway jokes in these movies are often funnier than the main gags, and luckily that was still the case here. But those weren’t enough to carry the movie. I mean, we legitimately couldn’t breathe during that Batman microwave scene. There’s no better feeling, and not getting it when I was hoping for was a bigger letdown than when your pot dealer is out of pot.
Speaking of p[l]ot, I found The LEGO Movie 2’s to be a bit forced. Centering the primary conflict on the relationship between a bickering brother and sister was funny at first, but its imaginative-ness was stretched thin over the course of the movie. And one of the best parts of the original was the fact that (SOGGY SPOILER ALERT) we didn’t know these animated characters were being played with by real-life people; of course you lose that element of surprise in the sequel, but I still felt like there was too much back-and-forth between the real world and the LEGO world, as this led to the writers spelling everything out for us instead of allowing us to make our own assumptions. This is a movie that relies on the power of imagination, but the writers didn’t trust the audience enough to use ours.
I was on the fence about whether to give The Second Part a Microwaved or Crispy rating, but what sealed the deal for me was realizing that this movie committed the most egregious crime I’ll witness a movie commit all year. What was it, you ask? I’ll tell you. It was the criminal, repeat CRIMINAL, underuse of my favorite actor under the age of 9, Brooklynn Prince. She went from her breakout role in probably my favorite movie of the past five years, The Florida Project, to this backseat role in The Lego Movie where she got minimal screen time and even fewer lines. I’m sure it was a power move for her, but I’d argue that she could have and should have been written a better part once she was casted. I, of course, have no idea about how that works and am definitely talking out of my ass right now. But come on, I want justice for Brooklynn Prince, and I want it now. Maybe she’ll get retribution in Part 3.