Trolls World Tour
I’ve broken this rule dozens of times in the two years since I started Soggy Waffles, but I try to stay sober when watching a movie I plan to review. Because when I drink, I forget, and when I’m high, I’m overly critical. But this is “Trolls World Tour,” and rules were made to be broken.
Let me start by saying that I think the first “Trolls” is a stoner masterpiece. There’s nothing not to love about it, from its colorfully trippy sequences, catchy song and dance numbers (both the original music and covers are bangers) to its all-star, evidently game cast. It’s fun for the whole family, and especially fun for two 21-year-olds getting high and killing an afternoon on a rainy summer day in Manhattan. Trolls World Tour, though? Trolls World Tour made me want to gut my eyes, cut off my ears and Eternal-Sunshine Anna Kendrick from my memory. Well, with the exception of “Up in the Air.” Now, *that’s* a movie.
All I can say is, the folks behind Trolls World Tour better hope the Razzie’s get canceled this year, because this is far and away the top contender for worst movie of the year. The plot is rancid: Rock is the enemy – what is this, 1954? It’s 2020, hard lines between genres don’t exist anymore. Worse still, the music numbers, which are supposed to be the highlight of the movie, are just abysmal. The last movie struck the perfect chord with song choices that were both nostalgic and relevant, but everything here is mildly amusing at best, frustratingly stale at worst.
And remember how Can’t Stop The Feeling! was the centerpiece of Trolls number one, and also one of the biggest songs of the decade? Well, JT chases that song’s success with the SZA duet, The Other Side, but it just doesn’t muster the same magic. It’s certainly catchier than anything else featured in the movie, but I can’t imagine it’ll even stick around through the summer.
In truth, the same can be said for Trolls World Tour as a whole: It’s got all the shine and gloss of the first movie (it still earns a 10/10 Trippy Rating), but it’s largely forgettable. And now that we all have all the time in the world to consume content, studios are going to have to do better to earn our attention.
P.S. Were the five seconds Brass Monkey horns really necessary? WTF. Which Beastie signed off on this – Mike, Adam? Make it a whole song number or don’t. Do better, Boys.